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Critical Social Policy
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‘We’ve never had it so good’: The ‘problem’ of the working class in devolved Scotland

Alex Law

University of Abertay Dundee

Gerry Mooney

The Open University

Class has become the social condition that dare not it speak its name in the devolved Scotland. This is despite the persistence of marked class divisions and structured inequalities within contemporary Scottish society. We critically examine the most empirically sophisticated and coherent analysis of social class in Scotland – that provided by ‘the Edinburgh school’ of social scientists, particularly their claim that Scotland is now a prosperous, ‘professional society’ where only a small but significant minority are trapped in poverty. This paper further considers the extent to which ‘devolution’, and the dominant representations to which it has given rise, serve to generate a series of other myths in which class is both devalued but simultaneously mobilized in the negative portrayal of some of the most disadvantaged sections of the working class. Against an emerging, home-grown view of ‘New Scotland’ as a prosperous ‘Smart, Successful Scotland’, poverty and wealth inequalities continue to be a necessary feature of the division of labour. In Scotland, as elsewhere, class remains the pivot-point around which much of social policy is encoded and enacted.

Key Words: class • inequality • poverty • ‘professional society’ • Scotland

Critical Social Policy, Vol. 26, No. 3, 523-542 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0261018306065607


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This article has been cited by other articles:


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Critical Social PolicyHome page
F. Coussee, G. Roets, and M. De Bie
Empowering the powerful: Challenging hidden processes of marginalization in youth work policy and practice in Belgium
Critical Social Policy, August 1, 2009; 29(3): 421 - 442.
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A. Ritchie and R. Woodward
Changing Lives: Critical reflections on the social work change programme for Scotland
Critical Social Policy, August 1, 2009; 29(3): 510 - 532.
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Critical Social PolicyHome page
F. Bechhofer and D. Mccrone
Some critical comments on Law and Mooney (2006)
Critical Social Policy, May 1, 2007; 27(2): 253 - 260.
[Abstract] [PDF]


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Critical Social PolicyHome page
A. Law and G. Mooney
Reply to Bechhofer and McCrone
Critical Social Policy, May 1, 2007; 27(2): 260 - 265.
[PDF]


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Critical Social PolicyHome page
G. Mooney and C. Williams
Forging new 'ways of life'? Social policy and nation building in devolved Scotland and Wales
Critical Social Policy, August 1, 2006; 26(3): 608 - 629.
[Abstract] [PDF]