Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization

For decades, the Weberian approach to the study of professions has been strong, emphasizing state authorization and market monopolies as constituting what is considered a profession. Originally, however, the Weberian conception of closure, or the ways in which a profession is constituted and made s...

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Main Author: Gitte Sommer Harrits
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences 2014-03-01
Series:Professions and Professionalism
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/pp/article/view/567
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spelling doaj-ef96f43f3a61418d9d47cf1c229da38d2020-11-24T22:15:51ZengOslo and Akershus University College of Applied SciencesProfessions and Professionalism1893-10492014-03-014110.7577/pp.567519Professional Closure Beyond State AuthorizationGitte Sommer Harrits0Aarhus University For decades, the Weberian approach to the study of professions has been strong, emphasizing state authorization and market monopolies as constituting what is considered a profession. Originally, however, the Weberian conception of closure, or the ways in which a profession is constituted and made separate, was broader. This article suggests a revision of the closure concept, integrating insights from Pierre Bourdieu, and conceptualizing professional closure as the intersection of social, symbolic and legal closure. Based on this revision, this article demonstrates how to apply such a concept in empirical studies. This is done by exploring social, symbolic and legal closure across sixteen professional degree programs. The analyses show a tendency for some overlap between different forms of closure, with a somewhat divergent pattern for legal closure. Results support the argument that we need to study these processes as an intersection of different sources of closure, including capital, lifestyles and discourse https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/pp/article/view/567
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gitte Sommer Harrits
spellingShingle Gitte Sommer Harrits
Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
Professions and Professionalism
author_facet Gitte Sommer Harrits
author_sort Gitte Sommer Harrits
title Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
title_short Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
title_full Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
title_fullStr Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
title_full_unstemmed Professional Closure Beyond State Authorization
title_sort professional closure beyond state authorization
publisher Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences
series Professions and Professionalism
issn 1893-1049
publishDate 2014-03-01
description For decades, the Weberian approach to the study of professions has been strong, emphasizing state authorization and market monopolies as constituting what is considered a profession. Originally, however, the Weberian conception of closure, or the ways in which a profession is constituted and made separate, was broader. This article suggests a revision of the closure concept, integrating insights from Pierre Bourdieu, and conceptualizing professional closure as the intersection of social, symbolic and legal closure. Based on this revision, this article demonstrates how to apply such a concept in empirical studies. This is done by exploring social, symbolic and legal closure across sixteen professional degree programs. The analyses show a tendency for some overlap between different forms of closure, with a somewhat divergent pattern for legal closure. Results support the argument that we need to study these processes as an intersection of different sources of closure, including capital, lifestyles and discourse
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/pp/article/view/567
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