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Dr. Peter Herrmann, The Jasnaja Poljana, Aghabullogue, Clonmoyle, Co. Cork Ph. +353.(0)87.2303335, Secretariat: +353.(0)86.3454589, e-mail: herrmann@esosc.eu, skype: peteresosc URL: http://www.esosc.eu

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Peter Herrmann: REINVENTING THE WHEEL OR SQUARING THE CIRCLE SUSTAINABLE SOCIAL QUALITY VS SOCIAL POLICY 2013

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy Peter Herrmann1

Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy2

Dr. phil (Bremen, Germany). Studies in Sociology (Bielefeld, Germany), Economics (Hamburg, Germany), Political Science (Leipzig, Germany) and Social Policy and Philosophy (Bremen, Germany). Had been teaching at several Third Level Institutions across the EU; currently correspondent to the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Social Law (Munich, Germany). He holds position as for instance that of a senior advisor to the European Foundation on Social Quality (The Hague, Netherlands), member of the Advisory Board of EURISPES Instituto di Studi Politici, Economici e Sociali, Rome, member of the Scientific Board and its coordination committee of ATTAC Association pour la taxation des transactions financires pour laide aux citoyens, Associate Member of the Eurasian Center for Big History and System Forecasting, Lomonosow Moscow State University, Russia. He is currently adjunct professor at the University of Eastern Finland (UEF), Department of Social Sciences (Kuopio, Finland). He held various positions as visiting professor and is currently in this position at the Corvinus University in Budapest (Faculty of Economics, Department of World Economy; there since 2012 appointed as ass. prof.). He also had been research fellow at National Taiwan University, Taipei; The Cairns Institute, James Cook University, Australia; Visiting Scholar at Orta Dogu Teknik niversitesi (ODTU), Ankara, Turkey; Visiting Scholar at the Max-Planck-Institute fr Sozialrecht und Sozialpolitik, Munich, Germany He started his work in researching European Social Policy and in particular the role of NGOs. His main interest shifted over the last years towards developing the Social Quality Approach further, looking in particular into the meaning of economic questions and questions of law. He linked this with questions on the development of state analysis and the question of social services. On both topics he published widely. Member of several editorial and advisory boards; editor of the book series Applied Social Studies Recent Developments, International and Comparative Perspectives (New York, USA) and Studies in Comparative Pedagogies and International Social Work and Social Policy (Bremen, Germany); peer-reviewing for several journals in the social area and book series. Presentation on Occasion of Retiring from University College Cork, School of Applied Social Studies

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy

Abstract:

Social policy arrives frequently at junctures, being a non-discipline, bordering and combining elements from various other disciplines. The presentation will look at two major challenges: (1) Academic work frequently overlooks that division of labour, i.e. the establishment of subjects in research and teaching is also about disciplining. But is the notion of Spinoza's time, suggesting that Omne ens habet aliquod esse proprium every entity has a singular essence is true? Who and what is setting the references? (2) Part of the process of (self-)disciplining is about defining points of references. The ongoing challenge is not least about balancing politics and policies. Sustainable Social Quality is an attempt to integrate these dimensions. (3) To arrive at the trinity, that we have to look for a definite point of reference in societal practice not (only) as matter of analysis but also by way of taking the role of "organic intellectuals" (Gramsci) It is another attempt - after many predecessors, and competing with other paradigms. So are we then just reinventing the wheel or squaring the circle? The presentation will, of course, not provide the answers - but it may be able to put forward some questions that need attention and demand us as collective to thoroughly think about.

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy Language matters and it is also important to look at from where language actually comes easily seen by Norbert, being asked for a power point presentation. Well, yes, here it is

In general and for the purpose of this presentation we should not establish too high expectations: take things as they are said and be aware of the fact that they are stated in a very specific socio-historical context. In order to understand this, the presentation will occasionally make some inspiring detours hopefully allowing also enjoying some beauties of life that carry historical messages about structure and change be aware: exploring the beauty of history and the meaning of society takes time, requires patience Although we may say that it goes without saying, we are frequently forgetting the deep meaning of exactly this fact: In any scientific work we are dealing with both, structure and process. ***** We may usefully start from Aristotles zoon politicon, the human being seen as social being. This does not simply look at the interaction between human beings surely an important factor. There are already difficulties as it is not clear in which way the politicon has to be interpreted. There is both, the reference to the state, to politics and to a very general understanding of togetherness, interaction.

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy Importantly it is clear that with all this we are not least acting beings only our own action, i.e. societal practice actually defines our very existence. Thus includes the ability not to act. Now, we may think of Friedrich Schiller who sees the highest form of existence, as man only plays when in the full meaning of the word he is a man, and he is only completely a man when he plays. (Schiller, letters, XV/9) Here we surely find a complex understanding dealing with regaining power over the will not only by way of control, i.e. oppression, but by way of developed forms of free play. What do we commonly think when it comes to these terms: play, freedom ? Children, unhindered in their navet is in may cases likely the first connotation. And the second connotation may be the artful play of for instance the reasonably uncontested beauty of a harmonious dance.

It is the beauty of clarity, order and balance. It seems to be a self-explanatory approach, allowing us to accept without asking, looking at something that has its own order, being independent. Probably this is part of our tendency to perversely celebrate power: the monuments of past and present oppression yes, I had been in the German Reichstag not only due to business, and part of the study trips I did with the students here from Cork had always been the

Swan Lake http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Arts/Arts_/Pictures/2009/3/26/1238081417847/Swan-Lake-by-AmericanBal-001.jpg - 27/02/2013

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy admiration of some of these monuments, the last one the most impressive town hall in Paris. It is the admiration of something able to stand without support. Supposedly in sculpturing Michelangelos statue David is a very early example for such order: the first free-standing statue, the young man standing on his own. As such, standing upright, the statue had been sending a strong and actually hugely contested message.

As the Florentine chronicler Luca Landucci noted in his diary, stones were thrown at the collossal sculpture even if it was being transported from the Office of Works, so that a guard had to be mounted to protect it. Importantly The stone-throwing youths came from pro-Medici families for whom the prospect of a figure with republican connotations being installed in front of the seat of the Florentine government must have been thorougly unpalatable.

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy (Zoellner, Frank/Thoenes, Christoph, 2007: Michelangelo. 14751564. Life and Work; Koeln:Taschen, 2007/2010: 46) Giorgio Vasari chronicled in this context a little story that has some metaphorical meaning. It happened at this time that Piero Soderini, having seen it (the statue, P.H.) in place, was well pleased with it, but said to Michelangelo, at a moment when he was retouching it in certain parts, that it seemed to him that the nose of the figure was too thick. Michelangelo noticed that the Gonfalonier was beneath the Giant, and that his point of view prevented him from seeing it properly; but in order to satisfy him he climbed upon the staging, which was against the shoulders, and quickly took up a chisel in his left hand, with a little of the marble-dust that lay upon the planks of the staging, and then, beginning to strike lightly with the chisel, let fall the dust little by little, nor changed the nose a whit from the what it was before. Then, looking down at the Gonfalonier, who stood watching him, he said, Look at it now. I like it better, said the Gonfalonier, you have given it life. And so Michelangelo came down, laughing to himself at having satisfied that lord, for he had compassion on those, who, in order to appear full of knowledge, talk about things of which they know nothing. (Vasari, Giorgio, 1568: Lives of Painters, sculptors and architects. Vol 2: translated by Gaston du C. de Vere. With an Introduction and Notes by David Ekserdjian; New York et altera: Alfred Knopf, 1996: 654 f.) From here it takes some steps to the question of the disciplining effects of which I promised to talk. But with a little bit of common sense, putting away the cultural bias it will actually be soon clear. * One of the fundamental demands put forward in science is concerned with the discovery of structures that are characterising any given reality. Methodologically this is a complex process and speaking of methods it seems

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy to be a rather simple matter of the famous bean counting. And with the latter we usually overlook that even the counting of beans isnt as simple and without presumptions as we like to see it. On the contrary and I quote Joe Finnerty one of the most effective applications of indicators is not merely to describe but also to analyse, thereby sometimes changing the definition of a problem. (Finnerty, Joseph, 2005: Social Indicators: Pitfalls ad Promise; in: Herrmann, Peter (ed.): Utopia between Corrupted Public Responsibility and Contested Modernisation. Globalisation and Social Responsibility; New York: Nova Science Publ.; 61-76; here: 69) * With this we arrive at the fact that paradoxically a second and simultaneous fundamental rule of science is construction. * The story of David and Michelangelos presentation captures both, the determination of structure based on some form of de-construction and the construction according to the interest that is standing behind research: David stands in front of his colossal enemy, finding the small point of his vulnerability: the gap through which he could throw the fatal stone Michelangelo interpreted this: emphasising Davids beauty, virginity and power: a firm independence. However, this translates into some inability to move. It is correct to speak of structure; and it is equally correct to say that this structure follows in some way a rule that is inherent in the person of the David later in history this is fully spelled out, the early modernity suggesting Omne ens habet aliquod esse proprium (every entity has a singular essence) (Johannes Duns Scotus, Opera Omina [1266 Duns 1308] quoted in: Suarez-Nani, Tiziana: Pietro Pomponazzi et Jenas Duns Scot critiques de Thomas d'Aquin; in: Biard, Joel/Gontier, Thierry (dir.): Pietro Pomponazzi entre traditions et innovations; Amsterdam/Philadelphia: B.R. Gruener Publishing, 2009: 29-67; here: 33) 8

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy And finally, the supposedly neutral viewer the Gonfalonier is getting lost in all of this: being deceived by falling dust and taking it for change. It is the lack of ability to understand the rigidity caused by looking at isolated facts. We may take it as metaphor, seeing it as confirmation of Michael Hardts and Antonio Negris stance: The triple imperative of the Empire is incorporate, differentiate, manage. (Hardt, Michael/Negri, Antonio, 2000: Empire; Cambridge, Mass./London,Engl.: Harvadd University Presee: 201) Now it is not a major step anymore David can be seen as anticipated manifestation of modern understanding of Anglo-American social policy as academic discipline: it is a discipline that defines itself by de-contextualising the subject matter; it is a discipline that looks at social administration of the good and the evil, the deserving and the non-deserving . * Of course, it is a long and winded road , at the end of which structuralism evolves. We may speak of Davidian social science and can easily see the fatal development: methodological individualism. Social processes are dissolved, deconstructed. And from here this social science always being applied social science supports in real history the emergence of something new, namely the modern individual, reflecting only him or herself. As we know from Descartes, it is the individual that comes only with this reflection to its existence. It is this reification of Narcissus that leads then Adam Smith to look for an invisible hand power and security standing outside, being seen as independent from the dynamic processes. * However, as much as we are dealing with ideal figures: imagined independent structures, we should not forget that these constructions are not based on free will. They are reflecting societal and eco-technical circumstances as they are given in the social structures: the productive forces and the mode of production the pedestal on which Davidian thinking stands. So much on David and the meaning for social science: established had been a figure that expressed

Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy compassion on those, who, in order to appear full of knowledge, talk about things of which they know nothing. The Gonfalonier, Michelangelo is facing is manifest in todays office worker: senior officials and the administrator depending on their instructions, immersed in seemingly neutral rules; rules themselves presenting themselves as technical whereas their essence is substantially about socio-political power: law and administration as presented by Max Weber, speaking of [s]pecialists without spirit, sensualists without heart; this nullity imagines that it has attained a level of civilization never before achieved. (Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. 1905,Chapter V, Asceticism and the Spirit of Capitalismhttp://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/weber/pr otestant-ethic/ch05.htm) Karl Marx refers to this in the famous statement from the 18th Brumaire. Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past. (Marx, Karl, 1852: The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte; in: Karl Marx/Frederick Engels: Collected Works; Colume 11: Marx and Engels: 1851-53; London: Lawrence&Wishart, 1979: 99-197; here: 103) The dream of freedom emerges turns into its opposite The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living. (Marx, Karl, 1852: The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte; in: Karl Marx/Frederick Engels: Collected Works; Colume 11: Marx and Engels: 1851-53; London: Lawrence&Wishart, 1979: 99-197; here: 103)

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy And exactly this is Michelangelos paradox as much as it is the frequently reemerging paradox of history: the dwarf, the powerless gaining power and establishing him/herself as giant. I am not talking about the tyrants, emerging for usually brief periods in history. I am talking about the tyrannical systems for which they are only mere backers. Coming back then to Marx contending that [m]en make their own history we have to recognise that this claim stands fundamentally in opposition to structuralism be it as closed and disciplining scientific methodology or be it as way of life. It stands against the rigidity of oppression, against the abduction and rape of the freedom of thought. The most impressive statue I ever came across is Berninis Rato di Proserpina.

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy
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For me it is an amazing, most powerful expression in sculpturing or even in art expressing the victory of process over structure. Sure, the title still focuses on the old hegemony: abduction and rape. Nevertheless, it also suggests a different focus. At the centre we find Prosperpina: fighting, resisting. Her rejection and aversion is expressing a new beauty: the beauty of action, the beauty of a revolutionary process. According to Simon Schama in a BBC-feature, this statue, Berninis great work, is the first piece in the history of art that dynamises sculpturing in a serious way (Schama: passim). Behind this we find in very broad terms two inventions: * the invention of the now civilised individual, distanced from nature and distanced from the social * and the invention of the economic sphere as distinct area a de-socialised sphere of social action, organised by stratified-functional segmentation.7 Of course, this meant not least that the process had been a matter of dialectical development: clearly positioning structures as independent of each other, the escape of the individual from the oppression of the political power had been simultaneously the establishment of new structures. In methodological terms it is what Karl Marx develops, contending that proletarian revolutions, like those of the nineteenth century, constantly criticise themselves constantly, interrupt themselves continually in their own course, come back to the apparently accomplished in order to begin afresh, deride with unmerciful thoroughness the inadequacies, weaknesses and paltrinesses of their first attempts (Marx, Karl, 1852: The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte; in: Karl Marx/Frederick Engels: Collected Works; Colume 11: Marx and

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http://www.arte.it/foto/orig/fe/255-Bernini_Proserpina.jpg - 27/02/2013 We can leave the further consideration aside, including the fact that actually globalisation is to a large extent a kind of replication of stratificatory differentiation; see in this context already Herrmann,Peter, 1994: Die Organisation. Eine Analyse der modernen Gesellschaft; Rheinfelden/Berlin: Schuble

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy Engels: 1851-53; London: Lawrence&Wishart, 1979: 99-197; here: 106) But importantly we find this as a process of a permanent restructuration and reconstruction this is only possible by way of fundamentally accepting the blurring of boarders. With this we arrive at a point not only of questioning given border lines, but also as matter of establishing new points of reference. Processes of change are of course again linked to real processes at stake is not an intellectual exercise of reordering the world. Instead we are dealing again with the fact that processes and structures alike are reflecting societal and social structures: the productive forces and the mode of production. Proserpina is, in this interpretation, not just expressing her rejection but she is also expressing part of another world, now being possible. And now also being necessary as matter of developing independence. The actual challenge for (social) science is to find a way that allows the construction of an ongoing structured processualistion in actual fact a rather harsh process of open battles, reminding me of Pablo Picassos masterpiece.

Such quest may replace at least to some extent the dominant discussion of social science that juxtaposes function and structure. Critical realism for instance being brought forward by Roy Baskar and Margaret Archer can be an important inspiration for this process. The social quality approach makes importantly reference to this work. At the same time it emerges from the analysis of concrete policy processes, in particular in the area of EUrope and

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/academic/class/15463f08/www/proj2/www/vramakri/images/artwork/PicassoGuernica.jpg - 10/9/09 8:35 AM

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy looking back to art we come at this stage really back to dance earlier reference had been made already earlier to its beauty.

At the core this new approach in discussing social policy is about a more radical version of dance, not limited top the disciplined form of an academic subject. Even as somebody who had been not only teaching social policy but who had been working for a quite a while in the lobbying industry for changes of social policy I dare to say that the social quality approach is about rejecting the concept of social policy at least in its mainstream understanding. This is not primarily about a rejection by way of criticising certain measures or policy programs. Nor is it about a rejection due to social policy being annexed to other areas of policy making, in particular economics, captured as social investment, the productive role of social policy, the increasing subordination under managerial, legal and financial requirements and regulations. At the core of the critique stands something else: the conceptual framework that is based in two fundamental flaws with this I come back to matters that had been mentioned already on more general terms. 1)It is about the definition of social policy as something that is rooted in processes and structures that are seemingly standing outside of society. Although social policy is surely seen as something that deals with issued that emerge from society, social policy itself is considered to have somewhat
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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy different roots: it is about intervention, activities on behalf or in the interest of certain groups, pursuing certain moral ideas and and predominantly at the end society comes into play and social policy strives for a better society. In short, the social is by and large something imagined, not something real. It is a distinct state in some ways similar to Benedict Andersons Imagined Communities. To put it on its feet, we would need a clear and explicit understanding of what the social actually is the proposal by the social quality approach is to understand it as outcome of the interaction between people (constituted as actors) and their constructed and natural environment. Its subject matter refers to peoples interrelated productive and reproductive relationships. In other words, the constitutive interdependency between processes of self-realisation and processes governing the formation of collective identities is a condition for the social and its progress or decline. (van der Maesen, Laurent J.G./Walker, Alan, 2012: Social Quality and Sustainability; in: van der Maesen, Laurent J.G./Walker, Alan (Eds.): Social quality: From Theory to indicators; Basingstoke: Macmillan: 250-274: 260) Furthermore, the real ground has to be seen in the production and reproduction of daily lives. David Harvey asserts that [a]t Marxs conception of the world lies the notion of an appropriation of nature by human beings in order to satisfy their wants and needs. (Harvey, David, 2006: Limits to Capital; London/Brooklyn, Verso 5) This brings us immediately to the point Marx himself emphasises. Point of departure is a simple relationality: [i]ndividuals producing in a society

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy (Marx, Karl: Introduction (to the Economic Manuscripts of 18571858 [First Version of Capital]); in: Karl Marx. Frederick Engels. Collected Works; volume 28: Karl Marx: 1857-61; London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1986: 17-48; here: 17) And he ascertains: The further back we go in history, the more does the individual, and accordingly also the producing individual, appear to be dependent and belonging to a larger whole. At first, he is still in a quite natural manner part of the family, and of the family expanded into the tribe; later he is part of a community, of one of the different forms of community which arise from the conflict and the merging of tribes. (ibid.: 18) Now it is important to emphasise that [a]ll production is appropriation of nature by the individual within and by means of a definite form of society. In this sense it is a tautology to say that property (appropriation) is a condition of production. (ibid.: 25) However, social policy in its mainstream thinking including approaches claiming radical changes are lacking a proper reference in this respect. Instead, arguments are brought forward from idealist perspectives. A confirmation is that social policy, at least in its mainstream and especially in its Anglo-American perspective, does look at the exclusion and oppression of the working class but it hardly recognises that it had been the working class and the relevant movements that led to what we see as social policy today. 2)The other reason for rejecting mainstream views on social policy is a variation of the first: although the dominance of economic interests is frequently highlighted and criticised and although it is even recognised as matter of power relationships the concept of economy is de-socialised. This could be

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy further elaborated; and it could also be elaborated by way of extending the analytical alienation by showing a similar process of de-socialisation in political thinking. In the same way in which Alfred Marshall deprived political economy from the political dimension it can be said that Hobbes (to name just one) the state from the political. The Leviathan is an anonymous institution, bar of a political dimension, reduced on its instrumental and thus technical character of controlling individuals. And paradoxically we find in both cases the emergence of superpowers that exist as a kind of cloud-castle. Society is dissolved into three spheres: market, state and communities and politicians as well as academics fit easily into the role of secular priests, celebrating the economy as father, confirming the state in the role of the obedient son, and hoping for the community and family as emerging holy spirit. Of course, law plays a role too presenting itself as a kind of Holy Scripture: a skeleton, keeping things together by way of a seemingly neutral, formal framework claiming universalism, pertaining particularistic class interests. On the one hand [a]n understanding of laws nature is hard to attain because, on the face of things, law seems to possess characteristics that cannot be combined within a single entity: law is an established social institution, but also a guiding ideal for such institutions; an apparatus of organized force, but also the antithesis of force; a product of authority, but also the source of any such authority. It is in this quality that has some theorists to conclude that traditional ideas of law embody a belief in the incarnation of the ideal within the realm of the actual, or a belief that law is brooding omnipresence in the sky. (Simmonds, Nigel, 2007: Law as a Moral Idea; Oxford: Oxford University Press: 21) On the other hand

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy [m]en and women create their moral identities and values as byproduct of interaction and mutual acknowledgement, just as they create culture, language and the structures of thought. The relationships in which we associate together can embody values that structure our choices and decisions. (ibid.: 7) And in a society in which power is not distributed equally, the meaning is clear: it is about the moral identities and values of the ruling classes. 3)And to produce then myself such trinity, I come to the next point of rejecting the stance of mainstream social policy: the externalisation of nature actually we are still dealing with more or less a variation or even the accumulation of the first point, namely the dissociation and idealisation of individual action. From here anthropocentrism is nearly unavoidable Leaving detailed discussion aside, we find human beings loosing the ability to act or more precise: they are able to act but there is no space left for developing practice. For social policy it means that it is fundamentally characterised by especially two flaws: ) It is highly individualistic, even to such an extent that so-called social rights are only conceptualised as rights of individuals; ) furthermore social policy is systematically limited by being detached from the socio-ecological causal and contextual foundation, i.e. the (re-)productive existence. Consequently and wrongly social policy as theory and practice avoids economy (and economics) like the plague. The celebration of noble ambitions, the striving for values that are proclaimed as universal is not simply a quirk of academic thinking it is in actual fact a dangerous des-empowerment. It may be worth a nota bene that it is also undermining academic work: values are stated, remain unquestionable and opposing them is similar to opposing god.

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy A new Alighieri may tell us if Benedict has to go through similar pain, as we know from Pope St. Celestine V, left to gran rifiuto the great refusal (see Alighieri, Dante, 1308-21: La Divina Commedia. Inferno; illustrata da Gustavo Dor, con commenti di Eugenio Camerini; Roma: Fratelli Spada Editori, without date: 36). And furthermore somebody else may show us how this kind of academic dislocation will be end in vein if we wont see it already with our own eyes. I do not want to delve into details of social quality as alternative approach. Shortly, however, one point. I had been asked last week during a debate in Rome as seemingly question: Why dont you call it socialism? * The initial answer had been straightforward: Personally I call it a socialist strategy. * Nevertheless, there is a more complex answer: we have to look for ways to adapt socialism and the search for socialist policies to the changed conditions. I.e. we have to find sound answers to the questions of the development of the productive forces, the meaning of such development also in a global, not only a national or regional perspective. Only from here we can understand the meaning of these changes for needs and also for governance. Though this surely means claiming socialist orientation it goes also further. It is a matter of analysing contemporary conditions, it is a matter of social practice in a conscious way. Taking the Marxist tradition, it means to use a permanently critical approach. Critique is the practice of exposing the social basis underlying an argument. Marxist critique is generally immanent critique, that is, critique springing from inside. critique implicitly recognises that the argument it opposes is right, but right in the context of a specific form of social practice which may not be declared. (Marxists Internet Archive: Encyclopedia. Critique; http://www.marxists.org/glossary/terms/c/r.htm#critique 25/02/2013 15:56)

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy Another nota bene: It is exactly this approach that is applied in some work by the Centro de Investigaciones de Poltica Internatioal (CIPI) in Cuba in which I am involved. It is also something that has important repercussions in countries like Bolivia, Venezuela etc. I make this remark as it highlights that we can expect in particular from peripheral countries and regions inspiring theoretical challenges in this context. Furthermore, the approach of Social Quality Policies instead of social policy is also not simply socialist as it is an approach that still ask for small measures, traditional policies and reforms that may be departure for further and more radical developments. * But having said this, at the end of the day it is a socialist approach to the extent to which it focuses on the social as complex structure of power-based interactions. Here we can briefly look at Antonio Gramscis discussion of hegemony and the role of the organic intellectual. Important is to recognise first of all that the core of Gramscis work is concerned with the structural conflict in society and the need for addressing it as question of clashing class interests for those who dont like the term: just refer to fundamental and antagonist conflicts between different interests. Second, Antonio Gramsci speaks of different forms of power much later Michel Foucault comes up with this as well, transposing it from the Gramscian view on class struggles into a more generic context of different forms of power imbalances on the one side, power struggles on the other side culminating in the view on the indivisible relationship between power and knowledge. The important point is that for Gramsci power is only real when it is intermingled with knowledge deep knowledge leading to organic power reflected in and by the organic intellectuals. Briefly quoting the Quaderni The criterion on which we should base our analysis is this: that the supremacy of a social group manifests itself in two ways, as domination and as intellectual and moral leadership. A societal group is dominant over opposing groups which it tends to

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy liquidate or which it even aims to subdue by armed force and it is leading the allied groups and immediate allies.10 With this I am coming to the end by highlighting four points that are in my opinion central for the development for taking responsibility in teaching sustainable social quality. First, I said in the beginning language matters. It does so in a twofold way: it is about clarity of language and at the very same time about use of language to substantially engage with what is going on around us. Engagement may be about going with the stream of beauty; and it may also require taking up fundamental challenges of disputes. Second, it is also about the clarity of analysis: only posing an exact question will allow us to find exactly the causalities and of course the casualities of wrong politics and policies. This is conditio sine qua non for finding therapies: answers to the burning questions. Third, it requires looking at the realities not as they appear but as they are. If we then say social policy to use this term, though not the concept is predominantly about Social Justice (Equity), Solidarity, Equal Valuation, Human Dignity (the four normative factors elaborated by the Social Quality Theory) and if we see that these values are decomposing, it is because the reality that had been behind them is decomposing. And without falling into relativism, we should not forget that our understanding of Social Justice (Equity), Solidarity, Equal Valuation, Human Dignity is always a historical one. Without this recognition and without taking firm responsibility for a clear analysis and open dispute, we arrive indeed at reinventing the wheel or squaring the circle.

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Il criterio su cui occorre fondare il proprio esame questo: che la supremazia di un gruppo sociale si manifesta in due modi, come domino e come direzione intellettuale e morale. Un gruppo sociale dominante dei gruppi avversari che tende a liquidare o a sottomettere anche con la forza armata ed dirigente dei gruppi affini e alleati. Gramsci, Antonio, 1934-35: Quaderni del Carcere. Vol 3: Quaderni 12-29; Edizione Critica dellIstituto Gramsci. A Cura di Valentino Gerratana; Torino: Giulio Einaudi editore, 1977: 2010

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy

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Of course fourth: Have look, the little boy, stepping out. If you ant, this kind of enlightenment is then leading to paradise referring to another time to Dante Like sudden lightning scattering the spirits of sight so that the eye is then too weak to act on other things it would perceive,

such was the living light encircling me, leaving me so enveloped by its veil of radiance that I could see no thing.

The Love that calms this heaven always welcomes into Itself with such a salutation, to make the candle ready for its flame.12

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"Seven Ages of Man" William Mulready, 1838 http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9e/Seven_ages_of_man.jpg. 27/02/2013 Dante Alighieri: Paradiso, Canto XXX, lines 4654, Mandelbaum translation. http://www.worldofdante.org/comedy/dante/paradise.xml/3.30 27/02/2013

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Herrmann: Reinventing the Wheel or Squaring the Circle Sustainable Social Quality vs. Social Policy

The William-Thompson-Working-Paper-Series is edited by the European Social Organisational and Science Consultancy for University of Cork, Department of Applied Social Studies and meant to offer a space for publications of occasional documents. One aim amongst others is to offer a space for publication of work by colleagues of the Department of Applied Social Studies at University of Cork. The work is edited and supervised for publication by Peter Herrmann, ESOSC. The papers will only be published as PDF- or word-file on the website http://williamthompson.ucc.ie. Requests for publication can be sent to ESOSC at herrmann[at]esosc.eu and will be accepted for publication after collective assessment. The copyright is still with the authors so that the documents are free to further publication.

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