Limitations of How We Categorize People

Social policy researchers and policy rules and regulation writers have not taken advantage of advances in assessing ways in which social representations of ideas about people can convey alternative explanations of social life. During the past decade a growing number of scholars have considered how r...

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Main Authors: Cynthia Wallat, Carolyn Steele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 1999-07-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Online Access:http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/556
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spelling doaj-82c7710fac3a489d9cf6653258ea61112020-11-25T03:04:36ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23411999-07-01721Limitations of How We Categorize PeopleCynthia WallatCarolyn SteeleSocial policy researchers and policy rules and regulation writers have not taken advantage of advances in assessing ways in which social representations of ideas about people can convey alternative explanations of social life. During the past decade a growing number of scholars have considered how representational practices and the representations that are outcomes of such practices have value. Neglecting to consider representational practices has consequences including failure to mobilize and sustain alternative ideologies that reject narrow perspectives on families and communities. As evidenced by recent OMB rulings on census categories, the dominant sense of meaning of population—and hence family and community—is quite similar to the 17th century sense of people as objects of a particular category in a place from which samples can be taken for statistical measurement. However, the contrastive analysis presented in this paper points out how sustained attention to consequences of use of sets of information categories collected to enumerate population to inform social policy can still materialize. In the wake of federal welfare reform, policy makers are particularly interested in questions of benefit relative to social service delivery and community revitalization. The presentation includes lessons learned from several dozen family, youth, school and community research projects. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/556
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cynthia Wallat
Carolyn Steele
spellingShingle Cynthia Wallat
Carolyn Steele
Limitations of How We Categorize People
Education Policy Analysis Archives
author_facet Cynthia Wallat
Carolyn Steele
author_sort Cynthia Wallat
title Limitations of How We Categorize People
title_short Limitations of How We Categorize People
title_full Limitations of How We Categorize People
title_fullStr Limitations of How We Categorize People
title_full_unstemmed Limitations of How We Categorize People
title_sort limitations of how we categorize people
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 1999-07-01
description Social policy researchers and policy rules and regulation writers have not taken advantage of advances in assessing ways in which social representations of ideas about people can convey alternative explanations of social life. During the past decade a growing number of scholars have considered how representational practices and the representations that are outcomes of such practices have value. Neglecting to consider representational practices has consequences including failure to mobilize and sustain alternative ideologies that reject narrow perspectives on families and communities. As evidenced by recent OMB rulings on census categories, the dominant sense of meaning of population—and hence family and community—is quite similar to the 17th century sense of people as objects of a particular category in a place from which samples can be taken for statistical measurement. However, the contrastive analysis presented in this paper points out how sustained attention to consequences of use of sets of information categories collected to enumerate population to inform social policy can still materialize. In the wake of federal welfare reform, policy makers are particularly interested in questions of benefit relative to social service delivery and community revitalization. The presentation includes lessons learned from several dozen family, youth, school and community research projects.
url http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/556
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