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5 WPR and construction of the object as a lens to understand governing families through AI technologies: combining epistemologies
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Rosalind Edwards
und Pamela Ugwudike
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents iii
- List of figures and tables v
- Notes on contributors vi
- Acknowledgements viii
- 1 Thinking with the ‘What’s the problem represented to be?’ critical approach to research and analysis 1
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PART I Rethinking WPR
- 2 What’s the ‘problem’ of ‘underlying health conditions’ represented to be? Applying WPR to concepts 13
- 3 Comparing and contrasting WPR and CDA: divergent conceptions of discourse and distinct analytical strategies 30
- 4 Genealogy and WPR: the importance of Bacchi’s questions when evoking a genealogical sensibility 46
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PART II Extending WPR
- 5 WPR and construction of the object as a lens to understand governing families through AI technologies: combining epistemologies 65
- 6 Where critical hands touch: towards decolonial policy analysis 81
- 7 Where is the problem represented to be? 99
- 8 Emotional problems: poststructural policy analysis and emotional discourses in the case of birth tourism 112
- 9 Winding up the future? The crank radio as policy 127
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PART III Reflecting on WPR
- 10 Enabling self-problematising? Strategically choosing re-analysis and co-authorship with an attention to difference 149
- 11 Reflecting on the value of the WPR framework as a teaching tool in public policy analysis 161
- 12 Doing WPR analysis with practitioners: from emotions to political change 174
- 13 Conclusion: A conversation about thinking with WPR 185
- Index 198
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents iii
- List of figures and tables v
- Notes on contributors vi
- Acknowledgements viii
- 1 Thinking with the ‘What’s the problem represented to be?’ critical approach to research and analysis 1
-
PART I Rethinking WPR
- 2 What’s the ‘problem’ of ‘underlying health conditions’ represented to be? Applying WPR to concepts 13
- 3 Comparing and contrasting WPR and CDA: divergent conceptions of discourse and distinct analytical strategies 30
- 4 Genealogy and WPR: the importance of Bacchi’s questions when evoking a genealogical sensibility 46
-
PART II Extending WPR
- 5 WPR and construction of the object as a lens to understand governing families through AI technologies: combining epistemologies 65
- 6 Where critical hands touch: towards decolonial policy analysis 81
- 7 Where is the problem represented to be? 99
- 8 Emotional problems: poststructural policy analysis and emotional discourses in the case of birth tourism 112
- 9 Winding up the future? The crank radio as policy 127
-
PART III Reflecting on WPR
- 10 Enabling self-problematising? Strategically choosing re-analysis and co-authorship with an attention to difference 149
- 11 Reflecting on the value of the WPR framework as a teaching tool in public policy analysis 161
- 12 Doing WPR analysis with practitioners: from emotions to political change 174
- 13 Conclusion: A conversation about thinking with WPR 185
- Index 198