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Moral Elites and the De-Paradoxification of Danish Social Policy Between Civil Society and State (1849–2022)

Sevelsted, Anders LU (2023) In Voluntas 34(3). p.452-462
Abstract

The article argues that in Denmark during the past 150 years, moral elites have been central in settling paradoxes within social policy by developing ‘classifications’ of citizens and sectors: who are deserving of help and what sector (public or third) should provide care. Contrary to widely held beliefs, historically, there is no logical or practical connection between ‘more deserving’ and ‘state support’. Theoretically, the article integrates elite scholarship and cultural sociology in developing a concept of moral elites’ power from—their sources of moral authority—and power to, the way that they have used their power to classify citizens and sectors. Empirically, the Danish moral elite and its involvement in social policy are... (More)

The article argues that in Denmark during the past 150 years, moral elites have been central in settling paradoxes within social policy by developing ‘classifications’ of citizens and sectors: who are deserving of help and what sector (public or third) should provide care. Contrary to widely held beliefs, historically, there is no logical or practical connection between ‘more deserving’ and ‘state support’. Theoretically, the article integrates elite scholarship and cultural sociology in developing a concept of moral elites’ power from—their sources of moral authority—and power to, the way that they have used their power to classify citizens and sectors. Empirically, the Danish moral elite and its involvement in social policy are analyzed based on secondary as well as primary historical sources. Findings: The development of the Danish moral elite has roots in the administrators of the nineteenth-century absolutist state: the clergy, medical doctors, and lawyers. Educational resources and state affiliation continue to be central to moral elite status. Economists have ascended to the top of the moral elite, while clergymen have dropped out. Three major classifications were developed during the period. ‘Help to self-help’ (late nineteenth century): deserving poor should receive help from private charity, while the public system should deter and discipline. ‘Rights’ (mid-twentieth century): the state should care for all, philanthropy mostly considered stigmatizing. ‘Workfare’ (late twentieth century to present): citizens are considered deserving as long as they are ‘active’, and sectors are considered equal in providing for citizens as long as they reach the economistic goal of activation.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Deservingness, Moral elites, Philanthropy, Voluntarism, Welfare state
in
Voluntas
volume
34
issue
3
pages
452 - 462
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • pmid:35971536
  • scopus:85135832710
ISSN
0957-8765
DOI
10.1007/s11266-022-00509-z
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d8713f4f-dfc9-4eae-9e7e-0f09070446aa
date added to LUP
2022-09-06 15:05:52
date last changed
2024-04-18 13:54:49
@article{d8713f4f-dfc9-4eae-9e7e-0f09070446aa,
  abstract     = {{<p>The article argues that in Denmark during the past 150 years, moral elites have been central in settling paradoxes within social policy by developing ‘classifications’ of citizens and sectors: who are deserving of help and what sector (public or third) should provide care. Contrary to widely held beliefs, historically, there is no logical or practical connection between ‘more deserving’ and ‘state support’. Theoretically, the article integrates elite scholarship and cultural sociology in developing a concept of moral elites’ power from—their sources of moral authority—and power to, the way that they have used their power to classify citizens and sectors. Empirically, the Danish moral elite and its involvement in social policy are analyzed based on secondary as well as primary historical sources. Findings: The development of the Danish moral elite has roots in the administrators of the nineteenth-century absolutist state: the clergy, medical doctors, and lawyers. Educational resources and state affiliation continue to be central to moral elite status. Economists have ascended to the top of the moral elite, while clergymen have dropped out. Three major classifications were developed during the period. ‘Help to self-help’ (late nineteenth century): deserving poor should receive help from private charity, while the public system should deter and discipline. ‘Rights’ (mid-twentieth century): the state should care for all, philanthropy mostly considered stigmatizing. ‘Workfare’ (late twentieth century to present): citizens are considered deserving as long as they are ‘active’, and sectors are considered equal in providing for citizens as long as they reach the economistic goal of activation.</p>}},
  author       = {{Sevelsted, Anders}},
  issn         = {{0957-8765}},
  keywords     = {{Deservingness; Moral elites; Philanthropy; Voluntarism; Welfare state}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{452--462}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Voluntas}},
  title        = {{Moral Elites and the De-Paradoxification of Danish Social Policy Between Civil Society and State (1849–2022)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11266-022-00509-z}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s11266-022-00509-z}},
  volume       = {{34}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}