Occupational Therapy Publications

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2020

Journal

Canadian journal of occupational therapy. Revue canadienne d'ergotherapie

Volume

2

Issue

87

First Page

137

Last Page

143

URL with Digital Object Identifier

https://doi.org/10.1177/0008417419892712

Abstract

BACKGROUND.: As front-line service providers who often work in systems regulated by governmental bodies, occupational therapists can be conceptualized as "street-level bureaucrats" ( Lipsky, 1980/2010 ) who effect and are affected by policy.

PURPOSE.: Drawing on understandings from a study of long-term unemployment, this article proposes that occupational therapists, as street-level bureaucrats, respond to inter-related policies and systems in ways that can perpetuate, resist, or transform opportunities for doing and being.

KEY ISSUES.: By highlighting practitioners' everyday negotiation of governmental, organizational, and professional power relations, the notion of street-level bureaucracy illuminates the political nature of practice as well as the possibilities and boundaries that policy can place on ideal forms and outcomes of practice.

IMPLICATIONS.: Framing occupational therapists as street-level bureaucrats reinforces practitioners' situatedness as political actors. Mobilizing this framing can enhance awareness of occupational therapists' exercise of discretion, which can be investigated as a basis for occupation-focused and emancipatory forms of practice.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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