scholarly journals From antagonists to allies? Exploring the critical performativity of alternative organization

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-97
Author(s):  
Sine N. Just ◽  
Christian De Cock ◽  
Stephan M. Schaefer
2021 ◽  
pp. 009145092110037
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Bartoszko

Until recently, Norway remained immovable on its conservative policy that illegal drug use is a crime. In 2018, the Health Minister appointed an inquiry commission to design a less restrictive drug policy, which included two “drug user representatives.” But the Minister’s choices for these posts met massive dissatisfaction from some drug users who contended that the representatives “are not real drug users” and do not “speak for” nor “act on the behalf” of their experiences and opinions. They mobilized to establish an alternative organization, the Shadow Committee, to propose a drug policy reform shaped by “the user voices” and “not polluted by political compromises.” Yet, while performing a labor of difference, this committee, too, became caught in conflicting landscapes of representation with some members contesting strategic solidarity. Based on this case, and an ethnographic fieldwork among the protesters, this article investigates the concept of representation as understood, contested and applied by “drug users.” Exploring how they relate to “user voices” and question the authenticity of some of “user representatives,” I highlight how changing political landscapes affect understandings of representation and shape political, individual and collective forms of involvement. I draw on Pitkin’s political philosophy and apply the classical categorization of political representation to suggest reconsidering the governing assumptions regarding “user representatives” that increasingly inform drug and treatment policies in Norway. I ask if the concept of representation itself may be a barrier to meaningful involvement.


1974 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley L. Brodsky ◽  
Asher R. Pacht

Most correctional mental health services suffer from diffi culties in recruiting and maintaining well-qualified staff members and from producing much nonfunctional work. The use of a Clinical Resources Center (CRC), in which staff and functions are directed toward specific performance objectives, is suggested as an alternative organization of services. The CRC would offer (1) screening, targeted to actual transfer and organizational de cisions and conducted at the lowest staff level necessary; (2) in tensive individual evaluations for early identification and agency program planning; (3) direct treatment services; (4) field and consultation services throughout the system and within the in stitution, including management and training functions; and (5) program development, personnel development and training, and research. By concentrating substantial numbers of behavioral professionals in one location, the CRC mobilizes their skills toward meeting specific departmental objectives. It is designed to serve as both a test laboratory for program ideas and a means of extending mental health resources and skills through a cor rectional system.


2021 ◽  
pp. 79-84
Author(s):  
William Klinger ◽  
Denis Kuljiš

This chapter begins with Marshall Tito's reminiscences on his anti-faction campaign that ensued when he came to the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY) secretariat after Milan Gorkić's disappearance. It considers Tito's purging of various elements from the CPY as an attack on the strongest party organization in the country as most of the 200 communists served long-term prison terms in Sremska Mitrovica. It also recounts the twofold impact of the arrests of 1935 and 1936, which destroyed the CPY's field operatives and created an alternative organization behind bars. The chapter looks at the dispatch sent by Moscow in January 1938, which confirmed the replacement of Petko Miletić as the leader of the Mitrovica Prison Committee. It demonstrates how Tito capitalized on his investment in the network he had singlehandedly formed in accordance with Comintern's general instructions.


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