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Mutual obligation? Regulating by supervision and surveillance in Australian income support policy

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journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Stephen Parker, R Fopp
Through an analysis of speeches by government ministers, documents and regulations, this article examines the Australian national government’s surveillance of unemployed people through what is known as Activity Testing, and more specifically as Mutual Obligation. It seeks to merge the social policy analysis of Mutual Obligation with a surveillance perspective in order to delve deeper into the underlying nature of the policy and its implications for people who are unemployed. It does this by 1. Outlining the neo-liberal political theory underlying these policies; 2. Illustrating the nature and extent of surveillance of people in receipt of income support, and 3. Employing Foucault’s concepts of the technologies of domination and the self to highlight the controlling and coercive aspects of Mutual Obligation in achieving certain of the Government’s political and policy objectives. In doing so, the analysis will make visible something of the power exerted over the disadvantaged while subject to such surveillance.

History

Journal

Surveillance and society

Volume

3

Issue

1

Pagination

107 - 128

Publisher

Surveillance Studies Network

Location

Newcastle upon Tyne, England

ISSN

1477-7487

Language

eng

Notes

Reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright owner.

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Surveillance & Society and the author(s).