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dc.contributor.authorSoldatic, Karen
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T13:29:59Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T13:29:59Z
dc.date.created2012-01-29T20:00:36Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.identifier.citationSoldatic, Karen. 2011. Appointment time: Disability and neoliberal workfare temporalities. Critical Sociology. 1: pp. 1-15.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/32244
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/0896920511430168
dc.description.abstract

My primary interest in this article is to reveal the complexity of neoliberal temporalities on the lives of disabled people forced to participate in workfare regimes to maintain access to social security measures and programming. Through drawing upon some of the contemporary debates arising within the social study of time, this article explicates what Jessop refers to as the sovereignty of time that has emerged with the global adoption of neoliberal workfare regimes. It is argued that the central role of temporality within the globalizing project of neoliberal workfare and the positioning of disability within these global macro-structural processes requires the sociological imagination to return to both time as a theme and time as a methodology.

dc.publisherSage
dc.subjecttemporality
dc.subjectneoliberalism
dc.subjectsociology
dc.subjectworkfare
dc.subjectdisability
dc.titleAppointment time: Disability and neoliberal workfare temporalities
dc.typeJournal Article
dcterms.source.volume1
dcterms.source.startPage1
dcterms.source.endPage15
dcterms.source.titleCritical Sociology
curtin.note

The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Critical Sociology, 1, 2011 by SAGE Publications Ltd, All rights reserved. © Soldatic, Karen

curtin.departmentCentre for Research and Graduate Studies-Humanities
curtin.accessStatusOpen access


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