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Discursive recontextualization in a public health setting

journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by Julie Wolfram Cox, J Hassard
The authors discuss discursive recontextualization as a process of discursive change in which stable referents may be recombined. As such, discursive recontextualization recognizes the interplay of both stability and instability without necessarily privileging the latter. Drawing on intertextual document analysis of a series of public reports published in the wake of a major health policy initiative in Victoria, Australia— Health to 2050—the authors identify a discursive pattern in which descriptions of a disaggregation from large Health Care Networks to smaller Metropolitan Health Services echo those of an earlier aggregation of individual hospitals into the Health Care Networks. The authors suggest that future research into discourse and organizational change will benefit from greater attention to stabilization and such recontextualization as well as to fluidity and instability. They examine implications for change agents and for researchers in the field.

History

Journal

The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science

Volume

46

Issue

1

Pagination

119 - 145

Publisher

Sage Publications, Inc.

Location

Thousand Oaks, CA

ISSN

0021-8863

eISSN

1552-6879

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, NTL Institute

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