Dueling discourses, power, and the construction of the recovering addict: When social assistance confronts addiction in Toronto, Canada

In this article, I undertake a critical discourse analysis of policy documents and in-depth interviews with seven caseworkers and 28 benefit recipients to explore how two discourses, ‘work first’ and ‘distance from the labour market,’ inform how persons living with addiction access and then experien...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCritical social policy Vol. 40; no. 1; pp. 130 - 150
Main Author Gazso, Amber
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.02.2020
Sage Publications Ltd
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Summary:In this article, I undertake a critical discourse analysis of policy documents and in-depth interviews with seven caseworkers and 28 benefit recipients to explore how two discourses, ‘work first’ and ‘distance from the labour market,’ inform how persons living with addiction access and then experience social assistance in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Drawing in Foucauldian insights on power, I reveal the conceptualisation of benefit recipients’ eligibility for Ontario Works through these two discourses and how this is replete with ideological assumptions and disciplining power relations, constitutive of a subject position of ‘the recovering addict’, and suggestive of social control implications. I argue that the coercion and regulation of benefit recipients’ lives on Ontario Works has not disappeared but transmuted for Torontonians living with addiction, and conclude by considering the governance of this population as biopower.
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ISSN:0261-0183
1461-703X
DOI:10.1177/0261018319839158