Download Imágenes del Mundo, Política de las Emociones y Políticas Sociales
Document related concepts
Transcript
Cover Letter SOCIAL POLICIES AND POLICIES OF EMOTIONS IN THE PRESENT PERIPHERAL REGIME OF ACCUMULATION: THEORETICAL APPROACHES. Autors: Adrián Scribano, Angélica De Sena & Rebeca Cena The authors declare that the submitted article is not under review at any other journal and hasn’t been published yet in English. Adrián Scribano Ph.D. in Philosophy, University of Buenos Aires. MA (Master of Arts) in Developmental Science, ILADES, Santiago, Chile. BA in Political Science, Catholic University of Córdoba. Diploma in Human Rights from the Human Rights Institute at Complutense University in Madrid, Spain. Principal Researcher at CONICET // Director of the Centre for Research and Sociological Studies (CIES), Argentina (estudiosociologicos.com.ar). adrianscribano@gmail.com Angélica De Sena PhD Degree in Social Sciences, Master’s Degree in Methodology of Social Research, Bachelor’s Degree in Sociology. Researcher at Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Sociológicos. Undergraduate students’ professor at Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata and Universidad de Buenos Aires and graduate students’ professor at Universidad del Salvador. Contact e-mail: angelicadesena@gmail.com Rebeca Cena Social Sciences PhD student, beneficiary of a doctorate scholarship from Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (National Scientific and Technical Research Council, CONICET). Member of Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Sociológicos. Bachelor’s Degree in Sociology and Master’s Degree in Human Rights and Democratization. Professor at Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Contact e-mail: rebecena@gmail.com ABSTRACT This article aims at making a conceptual analysis of the links between social policies, emotions and World Images. It tries to frame the theoretical and epistemic plots of subjacent assumptions that involve (and activate) State interventions on "the social.” The following is the argumentative strategy that has been chosen: firstly, we will account for the links between social policies and the capitalist regime of accumulation; secondly, we will explain the proposed theoretical links between World Image and policies of emotions; thirdly, we will offer some arguments which show the analytical richness of linking social policies and policies of emotions through the concept of World Image; fourthly, as an example, we will frame the massiveness of social policies as a World Image that transmits emotionalities linked to the reproduction of the regime of accumulation. Lastly, as a conclusion, we ask and warn about some components of social policies which make them stand as tools for coloniality KEYWORDS: Social policies, Emotions, World Images, Argentina INTRODUCTION In Latin America, 129 million people1 are beneficiaries of Conditional Cash Transfer Programs (CCT). These State interventions are one of the bridges/mediators for the production of particular forms of sociabilities, experiences and sensitivities in present peripheral capitalism. CCT Programs started to be implemented in Latin America, as recommended by the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, in the mid-90s in the 20th century. The first expressions 1 “Most countries that started CCT programs maintained and substantially expanded them over the period of analysis. For example, between 2001 and 2010, the number of beneficiaries grew from 22 to 52 million in Brazil, from 16 to 27 million in Mexico, and from 0.4 to 12 million in Colombia” (Stampini and Tornarolli, 2012: 6). appeared in Brazil and Mexico: “Bolsa Éscola” (1994) in the former and “Programa de Educación, Salud y Alimentación Progresa” (1997) in the Mexican case. According to data provided by Cecchini and Madariaga (2011), if we make a space-time comparison, by 1997 CCT Programs were present in 3 countries, whereas in 2010 they extended to more than 18. At the same time, the amounts offered, their reach and geographic extension have increased: in 2010 they reached more than 25 million Latin American and Caribbean families, covering 19 % of the population and investing 0.40 % of the region’s GDP. In general terms, CCT Programs have been defined as State money transfers calculated on the basis of the number of children under 18 years old and directed to households living in poverty. In return, there are several conditions required that aim at strengthening what has been called family human capital. Although at first these interventions were focalized, at present they have been extended to a massive number of beneficiaries. In this regard, even though they do not represent universal interventions, they are a kind of intervention that, due to the characteristics of the social aspect in Latin America, concentrates an increasing number of people2. These programs have implied conditionalities subject to, on the one hand, the increase of “abilities” and “talents” of subjects through formal education and job training and, on the other hand, health controls related to compliance with vaccination required by the State. The intervention on these population sectors in denial conditions exceeds what is materialized in the cash transfer and comprises a series of rules and roles that enable/prevent certain emotional behavior. In this sense, 2 “It is necessary to take into account that these ‘new’ focalizations also lead to a ‘substitution of social citizenship in the universalist model by a precarious citizenship [which] is mainly related to two processes: the loss of centrality of work as a social integration mechanism and the implementation of a new pattern of social policies” (cited in De Sena, 2011: 57). and this will be the argument of this manuscript, CCT Programs make up one of the basic nodes of body/emotions management3 . In addition, all social policies, and in this case CCT Programs, have a certain World Image which, as a way of classification and division of the world contained in social policies, makes particular elements of the social aspect come to light. In this sense, if we tried to reconstruct a certain World Image contained in social policies, we could say which is the aspect recognized by the State as a problem, which are the causes which resulted in the situation defined as a problem, which are the offered solutions, who are responsible for dealing with the problem and which are the accountabilities. This article aims at making a conceptual analysis of the links between social policies, emotions and World Images. It tries to frame the theoretical and epistemic plots of subjacent assumptions that involve (and activate) State interventions on "the social.” CAPITALISM AND SOCIAL POLICIES Current regimes of accumulation require certain mechanisms, associated to the social and political regulation mode, that control each one of the agents’ behavior with the aim of making the regime long-lasting. From the institutions which materialize, produce and reproduce said mechanisms, social policies constitute a central aspect. They do not only affect material reproduction processes, having a direct impact on action possibilities through the distribution of socially available nutrients, but they also affect the production and reproduction of perceptual schemes that will enable some but not other social practices. In other words, they affect the way in which actors behave in different ways. Mainly, enabling/preventing certain energies socially available for action (availability and unavailability of body energies and nutrients) and through the production and reproduction of a 3 Scribano (2012a). series of signifiers and classification devices with the ability to impose perception schemes on subjects in deprived conditions. All regime of accumulation (Harvey, 2004) is made up by a certain social and political regulation mode. In order to last in time, it requires a regulation mode that establishes the parameters inside which the actors “can” wish, yearn for, act, like, etc. In other words, it is about guaranteeing certain predictability in actors’ behavior, predictability that adjusts to the norms and rules that allow for the regime’s validity. Regulation modes go beyond the formal terms the regime can establish and settle in institutions, religion, habits, socially expected conduct, education and the generation of certain feelings; i.e., the prevailing ideology asserts its dominant role and pervades all aspects of the lives of men and women with the aim of guaranteeing unity to the regime of accumulation of each time (Harvey, 2004). This regime is made up of a set of regularities that ensure certain capitalist accumulation conditions. A regime of accumulation is understood as "the mode of joint and compatible transformation of the norms governing production, distribution and use. In other words, a regime of accumulation permits, during a long time period, adjusting the transformations of production conditions and the changes in consumption conditions” (Bustelo Gómez, 2003: 147). It has to do with the stabilization of the relationships between consumption -wage-earners’ reproduction- and capital accumulation over a long period of time. And it implies the adaptation modes that occur between the transformation of production conditions and wage-earners’ reproduction possibilities. The existence, permanence and reproduction of a regime of accumulation persist as long as its reproduction scheme is coherent. “However, the problem lies in introducing the behavior of all kinds of individuals […] in some shaping that maintains the regime of accumulation working. Therefore, there must be “<<a materialization of the regime of accumulation that takes the form of norms, habits, laws, regulation rules, etc., that ensure the unity of the process, that is to say, the convenient consistency of individual behavior with regard to the reproduction scheme. This body of internalized rules and social processes is called regulation mode>>” (Harvey, 2004: 143-144). The social and political regulation mode “promotes, channels and limits individual behavior, socializes the heterogeneous behavior of economic agents and conditions the adjustment mechanisms of markets according to organization rules and principles without which it cannot work. But this is produced without ever reaching the point of denying the relative autonomy of State, business and individual strategies or the heterogeneity in the behavior of economic agents that can be framed inside the same institutional form” (Neffa, 1998: 281). In this sense, the educational system, the training, the persuasion, the inspiration of certain social feelings –for instance, work ethics- play a role which is closely related to the formation of dominant ideologies fostered by the massive media, different branches of the state apparatus (as social policies), and religious and/or educational institutions. Complementing Harvey’s proposal, late capitalism societies should also deal with population masses which are not within the formal labor market and that, if they are working, they do it informally and their income cannot guarantee their reproduction. They should deal with those sectors that are not able to satisfy their needs, although they want to, that were part of the labor force but are not anymore and that are part of the “informal” labor force. Some of the mechanisms or regulation modes of the regime of accumulation that directly affect these sectors are social policies since they not only allow for the mitigation of market “flaws” by giving out goods (monetary or in kind) and services to populations to face their own reproduction, but they also operate as elements which place in agents ways of looking and thinking about themselves in the world by transmitting certain World images (Scribano, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2004a and 2004b). WORLD IMAGE AND POLICIES OF EMOTIONS Every critical reflection about the social aspect implies much more than an immediate problematization of poverty -or whatever is expressed as a social problem at a particular time-; it involves the thematization –and significance- of related problems as the explanation for unemployment, job insecurity, etc. In this sense, “[t]he initial supposition is that every theory can be analyzed and criticized in different levels […]. Basically, these levels are the substantive theory, ontological, epistemological, methodological and critical levels. [The importance of the ontological level lays in the fact that] it is there where the ‘work’ of production and reproduction of world images can be seen” (Scribano, 2002: 100). These images correspond to structures which "adapt” facts in a certain way. In other words, they constitute ways of classifying and explaining social phenomena, their causes, appropriate solutions, the place of agents, etc. which define the ways in which what is identified as a social problem is and “should” be dealt with. World Images are closely related in one way or another to daily life; i.e. to the everyday knowledge that subjects share and which is always at hand to explain the social world. “In this context, world image will be initially understood –in relation to social science theories- as the set of suppositions about the existence mode of agents, time, space and their relationship with the social reality that the theories in question constitute” (Scribano, 2002: 100). The way in which we conceive and interpret the reality around us always comprises a form of contact with phenomena and, therefore, the transformation of this reality. In this point, the analysis of social policies involves an effort to clarify and explicit the different “models” through which said interventions are sustained. As of the world image that belongs to every intervention, it means making things happen and take some kind of shape, from some interpretative scheme which is assumed as representation of the reality that wants to be modified. These perceptual frameworks make different aspects of this world "come to light.” From this perspective, the denaturing task, from the analysis of world images of different explanations about the social aspect –social theoriesand of their intervention modes –social policy-, means to identify from which place and under which suppositions the social aspect is being shaped. This means asking which world we are trying to represent and intervene in: “[F]rom world images it is possible to see the assumptions of this visibility and the ‘values’ they involve. It is through the analysis of those images that ‘values’ and ‘subjectivities’ are transformed into potential ‘analyzable’ elements and, therefore, every theory assumptions become debatable in a rational manner. The value of each value is related to its framework of meaning and, once this link is analyzed, it can be turned into an interpretation context of the reasons that are the basis of interpretation and the visibility context […]. Trying to ask why these values are worth implies accepting that these values assert themselves and that the scientific task ends or begins due to its political consequences. What is achieved, in analytical terms, is very simple: the chance that the will to power is unveiled and that, free from the garments of rationality, it accepts the ever problematic displacement to struggle in order to conserve and transform some, but not other, regions of the social world” (Scribano, 2004b: 7). Analyzing the world images of social policies allows us to understand those structures that bear, in the form of suppositions, governmental intervention; it allows us to give an account of the perceptive schemes from where said theory is constructed and, exploring the shaping of these structures, to have access to the visibility grade they allow or prevent. From this perspective, every social policy is affected by a particular policy of emotions that will make up the modes in which actors in denial conditions feel, experience and act in poverty contexts. If, as we have previously mentioned, social policies occupy a central place in guaranteeing the regime’s reproduction, policies of emotions let us begin to elucidate some of the regime’s strategies –presented as the most intimate, individual and subjective- for its reproduction at the expense of a growing number of populations living in denial conditions and that do not represent a threat for systemic purposes. Perceptions, sensations and emotions constitute a tripod which allows us to understand where sensitivities are grounded. Social agents experience the world through their bodies. What we know about the world is because of and through our bodies. A set of impressions have an impact on "exchange" ways with the socio-environmental context. The impressions of objects, phenomena, processes and other agents structure the perceptions subjects accumulate and reproduce. Therefore, a naturalized mode of organizing the set of impressions obtained by an agent is formed. This framework of impressions sets up the sensations that agents “obtain” about that which can be named as internal and external worlds, social, subjective and “natural” world. This shaping consists of a dialectic tension between impression, perception and the result of these, which gives sensations a "sense” of surplus. In other words, it locates them closer and further from the aforementioned dialectics. Sensations, as result and antecedent of perceptions, give place to emotions which can be seen as the puzzle which occurs as action and effect of feelings. They are rooted in the states of feeling the world that hold perceptions associated to socially constructed forms of sensations. At the same time, organic and social senses also permit mobilizing that which seems unique and unrepeatable as individual sensations are, and they carry out the "unnoticed work" of the incorporation of the social that has become emotion. Consequently, the policy of the bodies, or in other words, the strategies that a society accepts in order to give response to the social availability of individuals, is a chapter, and not the least important, of power structuration. These strategies are tied and “strengthened” by the policies of emotions that tend to regulate the construction of social sensitivity. Policies of emotions require regulating and turning into bearable the conditions under which order is produced and reproduced. In this context, we will understand that social bearability mechanisms are structured around a set of practices that have become body and that are oriented towards a systematic avoidance of social conflict. Devices of feeling regulation consist of processes of selection, classification and elaboration of socially determined and distributed perceptions. Regulation implies tension between senses, perception and feelings that organize the special ways of “appreciation-in-the-world” that classes and subjects possess. The mechanisms and devices pointed out are a practical and procedural hinge where emotions, bodies and narrations meet. The forms of sociability and experience are strained and twisted as if in a moebius strip with the sensitivities that arise from regulation devices and the aforementioned mechanisms. Sociability becomes a way to explain the ways in which agents live and coexist while interacting. Experience is a way to express the senses acquired by being-in-body with others as a result, on the one hand, of “experiencing” the dialects between individual, social and subjective body; and, on the other hand, of the logics of appropriation of body and social energies. The system’s social bearability mechanisms do not act directly or explicitly as “control attempts”, or “deeply” as focal and punctual persuasion processes. They operate “almost unnoticed” in the porosity of customs, in the frameworks of common sense, in the construction of sensations that seem the most “intimate” and “unique” that every individual possesses as a social agent. Among them, there are two that, from a sociological point of view, acquire importance: fantasies and social phantoms. Ones are the complete opposite of the others; they both make reference to the systematic denial of social conflicts. Whereas fantasies occlude conflict, reverse (and establish) the place of the private as a universal and prevent the subject’s inclusion in the fantasized lands, phantoms repeat conflict loss, remind of the weight of defeat and decrease the value of the chance of counteraction before loss and failure. Fantasies and Phantoms never close; they are contingent, but they always operate, they become practices. This is how “feeling practices” are made up, which update/embody in concrete processes the set of sensitivities that make the policies of emotions. WORLD IMAGES, SOCIAL POLICIES AND POLICIES OF EMOTIONS The design, implementation and assessment of social policies is supported by certain theories that include certain world images as a set of suppositions/preconceived notions that hold a look on/an approximation to the subject, distinction resources among agents, ways of relating of subjects to objects and the time/space understanding horizons of the relationships in question. This implies a demarcation and a definition of what in a particular time is understood as a social problem. At the same time, it comprises a definition of the situation that will be dealt with (and which will be left out or will not be considered as a public problem), which are the subjects recognized as affected by this problem (and which are not), which are the identified needs and the ways to meet them (and which needs will not be of public concern), and who are responsible and to be held accountable for meeting them (and who are free from giving any kind of answer). In this sense, the World Image held in social policies supposes an appearance of a group of assumptions that set the limits and range of the social aspect of the time. The analysis of the world images of social policies allows us to elucidate the socio-historical (and unnatural) character of not only the previously mentioned problems as public, but also of the state or private answers generated around the former. A regime of accumulation includes the ways of managing the links between State and market, where social policies occupy a central place by reducing the social conflict levels and guaranteeing its reproduction in the long term. Under this perspective, systemic reproduction is not only guaranteed by goods transferences that decrease social conflict levels, but also by the production and reproduction of a certain regime of sensitivity which social policies expect and impart to those sectors under denial conditions. From this point of view, social policies are part of the production framework of policies of the bodies/emotions, creating the conditions for the structuration of sociabilities, experiences and sensitivities of those sectors. Through this path, there is a set of connections between social policies, policies of the bodies/emotions, world images, sociabilities, experiences and sensitivities. State interventions in the social aspect include, in an explicit/implicit way, the set of suppositions of certain "theories" about social structuration processes. In their design, modes of understanding the State, poverty, the relationships between social classes, etc. slip in. These modes are involved and re-signified by practices of management technologies that are applied to the realization of the policies, setting up/transmitting the world images implied by the theories that “originate” them. The ways of understanding the world, the classification and the performative establishment of world division instances and the modes acquired by theories that became body are linked to the production features of the policies of bodies/emotions. In other words, by creating sociabilities, social policies also produce experiences and sensitivities in such a way that what is shared unnoticed by management practices with theory suppositions becomes body. The social aspect that has become body is knotted and intertwined with the built-in statehood, including in the lives of subjects a certain experience that comes from the results of the dialectics between state practice and social practices. In close relation to the aforementioned, and as metonymic expression of the phenomenon, a strong link is witnessed: statehood practices are connected to the practices of a society normalized in the immediate enjoyment through consumption. The explicit intention4 of the economic policies of current progressive democracies in Latin America is to achieve growth by increasing domestic consumption where its spreading fulfills a fundamental role. Just for the sake of presenting an expression of this, in recent increases of the amount of Asignación Universal por Hijo para 4 “[…] In this case, all direct policy beneficiaries highlight the positive influence of AUH (Asignación Universal por Hijo, Universal Child Allowance) in their lifestyles and in their ways of being at school, especially as from their consumption growth. If we understand that the appropriation of goods is an action that integrates and communicates (García Canclini, 1995, 1999), if we think that consumption is an activity through which we feel we belong, we are part of networks or social groups, it is not possible to dissociate these practices from citizenship; being a citizen does not only have to do with voting or feeling represented by a political party, it also has to do with social and cultural practices that develop a sense of belonging and inclusion (Ministerio de Educación, 2011: 71-72). Protección Social (Universal Child Allowance for Social Protection)5, state organizations have set out that: “These measures represent real steps forward in the aim of achieving the social inclusion of more Argentinians and, at the same time, they encourage demand, consumption and economic activity in our country” (ANSES, May, 20136) “The problem is exactly the opposite: capitalism is consumption and we need to increase consumption, not adjust it. If there is no consumption, there will be no economic growth, there will be no development” (Speeches from Argentina’s Presidency7) Economic policies are “virtuously” coordinated with a set of social policies, in particular with the CCT Programs mentioned before, in such a way that in the last decade millions of Latin Americans have been incorporated, through state assistance, into consumption. This is one of the ways in which theories, through the world images they include, have had an impact upon sociabilities and experiences. Consumption has become a fundamental link between State and citizens. The strong link between economic policy, social policy and market becomes a restructuring factor of sociabilities and creates the conditions for immediate enjoyment of and due to consumption to become experience. Policies of emotions, since they hold feeling practices, are affected/penetrated by the consequences of dialectics that updates in world images included in the social policies and sensitivities constructed by the above-mentioned policies of emotions. The 5 Implemented by Decreto de Necesidad y Urgencia (Decree of Need and Urgency) 1602/09, at the end of 2009. 6 Available at: http://www.prensa.argentina.ar/2013/05/31/41229-la-anses-paga-desde-junio-las- asignaciones-con-aumento.php 7 Available at: http://www.presidencia.gov.ar/discursos/25918-almuerzo-en-el-council-de-las-americas- palabras-de-la-presidenta-de-la-nacion contradictions that exist between citizen, consumer and right bearer become body in millions of people8 and, in this instance, different sociability, experience and sensitivity forms are connected. Social policies create special sociabilities from world images. These are supported by and involve certain theories that, from the practices they generate, open up one of the possibility conditions for the market consumption experience to join/articulate with the one proposed by the State. In this way, consumption sensitivities are proposed/created, at the same time and concomitantly, by the State and the market. The regime of accumulation has succeeded, it has been efficient in creating the conditions for capital reproduction. In what follows, we take the problem of the universal/focalized as a possible example of the links between social policies and world images. ¿UNIVERSAL OR FOCALIZED? ¿AN UNSETTLED DISPUTE? MASSIVENESS, WORLD IMAGE AND SENSITIVITIES Social policy became a specialized field of university education along with the formation of a field of study and research on this topic. Both processes are understood in the context of the extraordinary socio-political and institutional transformation of capitalist societies which took place as from the mid-70s and of which the “Welfare State” is a basic part, but not the only social policy. The problem it deals with is social reproduction, in societies troubled because of, on the one hand, freedom and formal equality of individuals and, on the other hand, the “real” life conditions imposed by the commodification of the labor force which is permanently recreating the dependence and subordination of people due to and under several ways. 8 See about an approach to rights, Pautassi (2010a). In this context, we think it is important to take up again some of the central ideas of the debate about focalized social policies as an example of the development of a certain world image when they become massive. During the 80s the sphere of competence of social policies as subsidiaries in matters of poverty was set up, consolidating the substitution of the idea of universality by the idea of focalization, leaving aside the focus on the causes and turning to the symptoms; this tendency was legitimated the following decade (Sojo, 2007). In this way, we witness the chance to define social policies as a combination between public and private, where the State is in charge of “fighting”9 against poverty and the individual is alone and responsible in the market and with the resulting contempt for the principle of financing solidarity. “From there it can be established an analogy with the focalization reductionist proposals advocated from the 1980s and which from the point of view of poverty stated a similar paradigm in terms of social policies” (Sojo, 2003:134). In this way, during the 80s, there was a stronger emphasis on the proposals in favor of “focalizing” or “focusing” social expenditure in poor populations, in comparison to the “universality”, and generating the dilemma of universal or focalized policies. The decision means a change in understanding and implies at least economic and political elements which will determine the setting up and consolidation of a certain social structure, they make society (Adelantado et. al, 2006). If poverty is considered as an element that comes with the concentration of wealth, lack of skills, lack of physical capital and of complementary assets in a population sector, then action must be taken on employment and income distribution, and the State should reassign public investment with the aim of allowing the ”poor” to have access to assets. This means asset redistribution policies in 9 Scribano (2008) states that in the different ways of labeling poverty, the subject is always seen from outside as lacking or incomplete and he establishes three metaphors used in the representation and intervention of poverty: a) the military, whose actions refer to combat; b) sickness, whose actions refer to removing and mitigating, and c) as natural phenomenon, which should be reached or covered. factor markets, personal income taxes and “wealth” taxes, supply of goods for public consumption, goods market and intervention in technological development. In relation to public services, the poor should get better participation and not be discriminated against in policy formulation; they should have access to services and, therefore, be able to increase their productivity. In this way, universality essentially implies that the State should really guarantee basic rights, distributing the available resources among all citizens, but this does not preclude the recovery, by way of taxes, of funds which come from those who have the highest incomes. However, focalization essentially comes from multilateral credit organisms, mainly the World Bank, which state that in order to reduce poverty it is necessary to design well-focalized programs (Sojo, 1990, 2003, 2007, Vargas s/f). The World Bank (Banco Mundial, 1988a: 13, cited in Sojo 1990) proposes focusing on vulnerable sectors and generalizing the focalization of public expenditure. To do this, every country should a) contribute to solve the State’s tax crisis through social policies, b) concentrate social expenditure in the most vulnerable population groups through “focalization” policies, c) limit the State’s action in social policy matters, d) abandon universal policies, and e) relatively privatize social policies. “The World Bank states that universality generates inequality and proposes, in some occasions, privatizing services or modifying public services fees, making them different in order to favor groups considered to be top priority. The proposal is generally associated to a limitation in State’s actions directed to groups considered top priority and with preference for a private system that offers services to sectors with capacity to pay and even vulnerable groups” (Sojo, 1990: 189). In this perspective, in a world with limited resources, focalizing appears as the most attractive alternative for focusing benefits on those segments of the population “which need it the most.” The main idea refers to selectivity of social expenditure taking into account that resource concentration increases the efficiency of transfers destined to fight poverty. Focalization also refers to assets as determining factors of income; they are an objective group, with specific characteristics and/or attributes, which is also internally homogeneous in relation to the effect that a certain set of political instruments can have on it. In this way, the concept does not focus on the causes, but on the symptoms of poverty. Then, the efficiency argument is convincing for the critics of universal policies. It is about the expression of a society that recognizes those with less chances and worries about equity. This perspective can produce a strong restructuration and redefinition in the sphere of social rights through normative development of a “remercantilising” nature. This aims at wiping out universal policies and setting up those focalized in groups, social strips and segments excluded from labor markets which substitute social and economic rights for welfare-based support measures. In this way, the “corporatization” and private supply of welfare services have been integrated in the economic circle in a way that many social rights are becoming merchandise (Adelantado et. al., 2006). There is a change in meaning: physical assets are now marginal and human capital is considered as the minimum point for need satisfaction. Focalized policies are object of criticism in the following aspects: The technocratic increase and administrative and information costs; The necessary definition and redefinition of the poverty line; The chance to generate new sources of poverty from “unserved” intermediate population (not necessarily poor according to statistical definitions); They threaten equity goals by serving a particular population, since people require attention in multiple situations (education, health, food, etc.), and hindering the development of social investment; Selectivity is not perfect since the information about eligible beneficiaries is never complete; “They generated a certain privatization of social services and a welfare philosophy; this generated stable and permanent conditions for the dualization of society among those who can access market mechanisms and those who will always have to be “assisted” by the State (Garretón, 1999: 502); They devised the figure of the poor as “beneficiary”, generating a cultural change (Garretón, 1999); They fragment communities and erode social ties since there is a difference between those who receive/have access to a particular program or social plan and those who do not; Social assistance becomes a gift, something which is given under the conditions set up by a “giver” who is the one who decides what, when and how, inviting those defined as the poor to accept by limiting their own rights; They stand in the way of democracies because they encourage political clientelism since stockpiling of state resources by political parties where client-based ties are predominant are basic for the reproduction of inequality (Adelantado et. al., 2006); They require someone to act as a mediator, to determine who deserves or not a certain program, to certify –in some way- that someone has the necessary attributes to deserve this state intervention. Therefore, inequality is not just social, but also political (Adelantado et. al., 2006). Sojo states that the different selectivity criteria should be able to “determine if with the social policies adopted the aim is to eradicate poverty or that some kind of poverty prevails fighting the one that exceeds it” (1990: 197). During the 90s, social policies in Latin America and Argentina underwent a transformation in their three operation modes: labor, social security and welfare. In relation to the first one, the State leaves aside its role as guardian and regulator of contractual relationships10; as to social security policies, it opted for the privatization of employment injuries insurance and a great deal of the welfare system. 10 Due to a combination of a general system deregulation, the development of new flexible hiring forms and emergency interventions in the shape of active employment policies, among others. And in the specific field of welfare policies, referred to as money or goods transfers to society sectors which lack the possibility of meeting their needs through the labor market, there has been a double process of decentralization and focalization. In this way, in the last three decades state functions have been redefined and a new perspective on social policies has been consolidated which is based on destined budget reduction; a come back to the old administrative decentralization; the focalization of welfare programs in comparison to the universality of the Welfare State and a constant appeal to civil society (Halperin et. al., 2008). In the new century the idea of comprehensive social policies starts gaining force 11 (Arroyo, 2006a; 2006b; Clemente 2005 and 2006, Documentos Institucionales MDS, among others), casting a shadow over the discussion about universality or focalization. Arroyo (2006) emphasizes that an innovation in the implementation of Plan Manos a la Obra (“Off to Work Plan”) refers to its “massiveness” as the opposite of isolated and small initiatives, accounting for a “sustained and massive [management] with resource transfers for those who are outside the formal financial system and who have associative or unassociative production capacities” (Arroyo, 2006: 20). Rozenwurcel and Vázquez declare that “in 1996 the first massive income transfer program was created: Plan Trabajar (“Working Plan”). Its aim was to provide employment to unemployed people who were not covered by unemployment insurance. The program provided a nonremunerative amount of AR$ 200 for a six month period. Also, in 2000, Plan de Emergencia Laboral (“Work Emergency Plan”) was created, focused on a group of provinces with the aim of training and employing workers with employability problems” (2008: 253); then after the 2001/2002 crisis, Plan Jefes y Jefas de Hogar Desocupados (“Program for Unemployed Male and Female Heads of Households”, PJyJHD) became one of the emblematic programs with respect to 11 It is to be noted that the Director-General of the International Labor Organization (ILO), Juan Somavía, promoted comprehensive social policies in Latin America beyond the satisfaction that macroeconomic data can cause. 15/12/2010. http://www.primicias.com.do massiveness, reaching 2 million beneficiaries according to official data (Documento Institucional MDS 2004, 2010). It is necessary to take into account that one of its most remarkable points is the “massive” introduction of a series of beneficiaries to social programs. In this way, there is a new meaning of “massive” as that “for many”, an adjective that means “very large” and which hides that it is not for everyone. The new concept keeps at bay the debate about focalization or universality, leaving a clear evidence of the need to “serve the largest number of people.” In this context, it is possible to see how “the massive” is part of a policy of emotions and it considers the construction of a World Image as a basic component of the cognitive-emotional suppositions of the theoretical horizons and of the intervention of the present social policies, at least in Argentina. In other words, massiveness implies the assumption of a normalized society through biological/environmental “adjustments” of agents thought as people excluded from “development” who have to mend the defects of the market and the State through consumption. Massiveness implies that quantity is a social influence that reconstructs the risks of an environment likely to be managed with increasing interventions leaving “coeteris paribus” the deep qualitative modifications of the expulsion spheres created by capitalist expansion. In the same direction, massive interventions imply the perspective of a subject that, being “outside the system”, becomes an individual whose passivity is taken for granted in the management of personal and bank transfers. The main supposition of a massive look on social policies is the acritical acceptance that societies act in a constantly expanding and differentiating time/space understood as “development.” In this framework, adaptation and consumption are two privileged resources of massiveness for action coordination and subject differentiation, giving a fundamental character to subjectivity configuration. These four components of the World Image of massiveness are fed and close in such a way that it is impossible to think about them without their mutual interactions. According to what we have stated so far, there is a set of questions about which is the status of social policies in the current capitalism situation. We will deal with that in the following section. COLONIALITY OF SOCIAL POLICIES Over the development of this paper, we have seen that the regime of accumulation requires social policies to last in time. Firstly, because social policies reduce social conflict levels associated to people who live in denial conditions. Secondly, because they allow for their reproduction in normal conditions. Therefore, they are a key aspect of present peripheral capitalisms. As to their role in reducing social conflict, they operate through at least two mechanisms. One of them is the increase, via a monetary injection, in the consumption level of beneficiaries of, for example, what has been known as conditional cash transfer programs. The other implies an alteration of the ways in which subjects perceive the world around them. Here is where the notion of World Image acquires all its centrality, by making up and being made up by the perception and world division schemes that make some aspects come to light and others hide. This World Image contained in social policies works as a perceptual scheme, which enables some and not other emotional behaviors. The sociology of the body and emotions contributes to the field of analysis of social policies by allowing the reconstruction of the regime of sensitivity that a governmental intervention involves by establishing not only which needs will be recognized, but also which demands will be legitimated, which will be the solutions, who will be responsible and which will be the accountabilities. We have also analyzed the particular place of social policies as attempts to mend the defects produced by inequality, i.e. the “policies” oriented to filling the cracks caused by expropriation, and how the “revitalizing" of “the expelled” through consumption are the solidary opposites of the cultural structure of a religion12 that makes merchandise/subject mimesis the main link of a political economy of morals. We have also seen how the massiveness of governmental interventions on populations, sustained in world images, inhabit/create a set of sociabilities and experiences linked to individuals who have to “mend” the defects of the market and the State through consumption, based on a subject which, by definition, is considered “passive.” In relation to the link between social policies, theories and coloniality, there are at least three characteristics or problems that show up: a. World images of theories, by colonizing the layout of social policies, imply the use of a Eurocentric position as criterion for the elaboration of subjectivities and social relations. b. The current state of regimes of accumulation in the Global South, the compensation and conflict-avoidance mechanisms that social policies imply generate feeling practices in which resignation in created as an interaction criterion between State and civil society in a regime of wait as a civic virtue. c. The links between sociability, experience and sensitivity that occur in the relationship between massive social policies and policies of emotions are adapted to the size of a world of consumption that, in short, implies the triumph of capital reproduction at a global level. BIBLIOGRAPHY Abramovich, Victor & Pautassi, Laura (2006), Dilemas actuales en la resolución de la pobreza: El aporte del enfoque de derechos, presentado en el Seminario Taller: Los Derechos Humanos 12 For further information on neocolonial religion, see Scribano (2013a; 2013b). y las políticas públicas para enfrentar la pobreza y la desigualdad, UNESCO, Secretaría de Derechos Humanos y Universidad Nacional Tres de Febrero Adelantado, José & Scherer, Elenise (2006), “¿Dificultan las políticas sociales focalizadas el desarrollo de la democracia en América Latina?” Ponencia presentada en el XI Congreso Internacional del CLAD sobre la Reforma del Estado y la Administración Pública” 7-10 nov. Documento Libre. Ciudad de Guatemala. http://www.aecpa.es/uploads/files/congresos/congreso_08/area6/GT-18/ADELANTADOJOSE.pdf (Access 15/09/2014). Andrenacci, Luciano & Soldano, Daniela (2006), “Aproximación a las Teorías de la Política Social a partir del Caso Argentino”, in Andrenacci, Luciano (Comp.), Problemas de Política Social en la Argentina Contemporánea. Buenos Aires, Editorial Prometeo, Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, pp. 17-79. Arroyo, Daniel (2006), “La política social ante los nuevos desafíos de las políticas públicas”. Centro de documentación en políticas sociales”. Gobierno de la ciudad de Buenos Aires. Documento N° 36, Buenos Aires, Argentina. http://estatico.buenosaires.gov.ar/areas/des_social/documentos/documentos/36.pdf (Access 15/09/2014). Boyer, Robert & Saillard, Yves (1998), Teoría de la Regulación: estado de los conocimientos. Vol. I, II y III. La Plata, Eudeba. Bustelo Gómez, Pablo (2003), “Enfoque de la regulación y Economía Política Internacional ¿Paradigmas Convergentes?” Revista de Economía Mundial. No.8, 2003, pp143 173. Cecchini, Simone & Madariaga, Aldo (2011), Programas de Transferencias Condicionadas. Balance de la experiencia reciente en América Latina y el Caribe. Santiago de Chile, Naciones Unidas. Cecchini, Simone & Martinez, Rodrigo (2011), Protección Social Inclusiva en América Latina. Una mirada integral, un enfoque de derechos. Santiago de Chile: CEPAL-GIZ-Ministerio Federal de Cooperación Económica y Desarrollo. Cena, Rebeca (2011), Políticas sociales post-emergencia pública: continuidades y rupturas: [Programas de transferencias condicionadas aplicados en la provincia de Córdoba, 19892007]. Manuscrito. Universidad Nacional de Villa María. Cena, Rebeca (2013), “Políticas Sociales en la Argentina Actual: AUH ¿una nueva configuración en la intervención sobre la cuestión social?” in X Jornadas de Sociología, 20 años de pensar y repensar la sociología. Nuevos desafíos académicos, científicos y políticos para el siglo XXI. http://sociologia.studiobam.com.ar/wp-content/uploads/ponencias/435.pdf (Access 15/09/2014). Cena, Rebeca & Chahbenderian, Florencia (2012), “El crédito y el consumo como “condiciones” de contentar y contener a las poblaciones expulsadas”, in Boletín Onteaiken N° 14, “Felicidad y creatividad: cuerpos contentos y en movimiento”. http://onteaiken.com.ar/ver/boletin14/14.pdf (Access 15/09/2014). Danani, Claudia (1996), “Algunas precisiones sobre la política social como campo de estudio y la noción de población objeto” in Hintze, Susana (coord.), Políticas sociales: contribución al debate teórico-metodológico. Buenos Aires: CEA/UBA, pp. 21-38. Danani, Claudia (2004), "El alfiler en la silla: sentidos, proyectos y alternativas en el debate de las políticas sociales y de la Economía Social". En: Danani, C. (compiladora): Política Social y Economía Social: debates fundamentales. Buenos Aires, UNGS/Fundación OSDE/Editorial Altamira, pp 9-27. Danani, Claudia (2005), “Las Políticas Sociales de los ’90: Los Resultados de la Combinación de Individualización y Comunitarización de la Protección”. Coloquio Internacional: “Trabajo, conflictos sociales e integración monetaria: América Latina en una perspectiva comparada", Buenos Aires, Instituto de Ciencias (UNGS)/Institut de Reserche por le Développement/ANPCyT-FONCyT. http://riless.org/components/com_virtualtecas/assets/arquivos/46/comunitarizaci_n_e_indivi dualizaci_n_claudia_danani.pdf (Access 15/09/2014). Danani, Claudia & Grassi, Estela (2008), “Ni error y ni omisión. El papel de la política de Estado en la producción en las condiciones de vida y de trabajo. El caso del sistema previsional de la Argentina (1993-2008)” in Javier Lindemboim (Comp.), Trabajo, ingresos y políticas en Argentina, Buenos Aires: EUDEBA, pp. 259-298. De Sena, Angélica (2011), “Promoción de Microemprendimientos y Políticas Sociales: ¿Universalidad, Focalización o Masividad?, una discusión no acabada”. Pensamento Plural 8, Pelotas-Brasil, pp. 5-36. De Sena, Angélica (2013), "Sobre algunas feminizaciones y las políticas sociales". Ponencia presentada en Sociales. X Jornadas de Sociología. Carrera de Sociología. Facultad de Ciencias UBA. 1 al 6 de julio 2013. Buenos Aires. http://sociologia.studiobam.com.ar/wp-content/uploads/ponencias/955.pdf Argentina. (Access 15/09/2014). De Sena, Angélica & Scribano, Adrián (2013), "Violencia(s) en contexto(s) de pobreza. Formas, voces y <naturalizaciones>". Revista de Sociología. N° 23, Julio 2013, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Escuela Académico Profesional de Sociología. Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, pp. 231-255. Halperin Weisburd, Leopoldo; Labiaguerre, Juan Antonio; Delpech, Cecilia; González, Marita, Horen, Berta; Villadeamigo, José; Siffredi, Liliana & Muller, Guillermo (2008), “Políticas sociales en la Argentina: entre la ciudadanía plena y el asistencialismo focalizado en la contención del pauperismo”. Cuaderno del CEPED Nº 10. Buenos Aires, Argentina, Facultad de Ciencias Económicas, UBA. Harvey, David (2004), “Introducción” in La Condición de la Posmodernidad. Investigación sobre los orígenes del cambio cultural. Buenos Aires: Amorrortu, pp. 143-146. Hochschild, Arlie (2011), “La elaboración del sentimiento”, in La mercantilización de la vida íntima. Apuntes de la casa y el trabajo, Bs. As., Katz, pp. 129-154. Garretón, Manuel (1999), “Igualdad, ciudadanía y actores en las políticas sociales” Revista Ciencias Sociales, N° 009. Luna Zamora, Rogelio (2007), “Emociones y subjetividades. Continuidades y discontinuidades en los modelos culturales” in Luna Zamora, Rogelio y Scribano, Adrián (Comp.) Contigo Aprendí…Estudios Sociales de las Emociones. Córdoba, CEA-CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Córdoba–CUSCH- Universidad de Guadalajara, pp. 233-247. Ministerio de Educación (2011), “Análisis y evaluación de los aspectos educativos de la Asignación Universal por Hijo” http://observatorio.anses.gob.ar/archivos/documentos/OBS%20- %20000174%20%20An%C3%A1lisis%20y%20evaluaci%C3%B3n%20de%20los%20aspectos%20educativ os%20de%20la%20AUH.pdf (Access 15/09/2014) Neffa, Julio (1998), Modos de Regulación, Regímenes de Acumulación y sus Crisis en Argentina (1880-1996).Una contribución a su estudio desde la teoría de la regulación. Buenos Aires: PIETTE/CONICET-Eudeba. Offe, Claus (1990), “La Política Social y la Teoría del Estado” in Contradicciones en el Estado de bienestar. México: Alianza Editorial, pp. 72-104. Pautassi, Laura (2009), “Programas de transferencias condicionadas de ingresos ¿Quién pensó en el cuidado? La experiencia en Argentina” in Seminario Regional Las familias latinoamericanas interrogadas. Hacia la articulación del diagnóstico, la legislación y las políticas. Santiago de Chile, CEPAL. Pautassi, Laura (2010a) “El aporte del enfoque de Derechos a las políticas sociales Una breve revisión”. Taller de expertos Protección social, pobreza y enfoque de derechos: vínculos y tensiones http://www.eclac.cl/dds/noticias/paginas/7/37567/LauraPautassi_Derechos_polsoc.pdf (Access 15/09/2014) Pautassi, Laura (2010b), “El enfoque de derechos y la inclusión social. Una oportunidad para las políticas públicas” in Pautassi, Laura Perspectiva de derechos, políticas públicas e inclusión social. Debates actuales en Argentina. Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, pp. 27-66. Rozenwurcel, Guillermo & Vázquez, Claudia (2008), “Argentina modelo XXI: inestabilidad macroeconómica, empobrecimiento sostenido y políticas sociales”, en Cruces, Guillermo; Moreno, Juan; Ringold, Dena; Rofman, Rafael (Edit.) Los programas sociales en Argentina hacia el Bicentenario. Bs. As. Banco Mundial, pp. 235-272. Scribano, Adrián (1997), “Post-Empirismo y Rol Normativo de la Filosofía de las Ciencias Sociales” in Adrián Scribano (Comp.) Red de Filosofía y Teoría Social. Catamarca, SEDECyT. UNCa, pp. 231-252. Scribano, Adrián (1998), “Ontología e Imagen del Mundo: Algunas Hipótesis para su interpretación” in Segundo Encuentro de la Red de Filosofía y Teoría Social. Centro Editor de la Secretaría de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Universidad Nacional de Catamarca, pp. 209225. Scribano, Adrián (2002), “Pobreza, Ciencias Sociales y Filosofía: hacia un análisis de los supuestos ontológicos de los estudios de pobreza” Cuadernos Nº 15, Jujuy: Facultad de Humanidades, Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional de Jujuy, pp. 97-119. Scribano, Adrián (2004a), “A manera de introducción. De Fantasmas e Imágenes Mundo: una mira oblicua de la teoría social latinoamericana” in Combatiendo Fantasmas. Chile: Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, pp. 6-18. Scribano, Adrián (2004b), “Modernización y Teoría Social: Imagen Mundo y Analogías” in Scribano, Adrián, Combatiendo Fantasmas. Chile: Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, pp. 30-45. Scribano, Adrián (2007), Vete tristeza... Viene con pereza y no me deja pensar!... Hacia una sociología del sentimiento de impotencia. Córdoba: CEA-UNC –CUSCH-udeg mayo de 2007. Scribano, Adrián (2007), “La Sociedad hecha callo: conflictividad, dolor social y regulación de las sensaciones” in Scribano, Adrián (Comp.) Mapeando Interiores. Cuerpo, Conflicto y Sensaciones CEA-UNC – Jorge Sarmiento Editor, pp. 118-142 Scribano, Adrián (2012a), “El capitalismo como religión y segregación racializante: dos claves para leer las fronteras de la gestión de las emociones” in Picheira Torres (comp.) Archivos de Frontera. El gobierno de las emociones en Argentina y Chile del presente. Chile, Editorial Escaparate. Scribano, Adrián (2012b), Teorías sociales del Sur: Una mirada post-independentista. Buenos Aires, ESEditora. ISBN 978-987-26922-9-2 - E-Book Córdoba: Universitas - Editorial Científica Universitaria. Scribano, Adrián (2013a), “La religión neo-colonial como la forma actual de la economía política de la moral” De prácticas y discursos cuadernos de ciencias sociales, Año 2, número 2. Centro de Estudios Sociales (CES) Universidad Nacional del Nordeste (UNNE). Scribano, Adrián (2013b), “Una aproximación conceptual a la moral del disfrute Normalización, consumo 15/09/2014) y espectáculo” http://www.cchla.ufpb.br/rbse/ScribanoDos.pdf (Access Scribano, Adrián & Eynard, Martín (2011), “Hambre individual, subjetivo y social (reflexiones alrededor de las aristas límite del cuerpo)” Boletín Científico Sapiens Research Vol. 1 (2) pp, 65-69. Scribano, Adrián, Huergo, Juliana & Eynard, Martín (2010), “El hambre como problema colonial: Fantasías Sociales y Regulación de las Sensaciones en la Argentina después del 2001.” in Scribano, Adrián y Boito, Eugenia El purgatorio que no fue. Acciones Profanas entre la esperanza y la soportabilidad. Buenos Aires, Ed. CICCUS, pp. 23-49. Scribano, Adrián, Huergo, Juliana & Eynard, Martín (2010), “Alimentación, energía y depredación de los bienes comunes: la invisibilidad de la expropiación colonial” Onteaiken Boletín sobre Prácticas y Estudios de Acción Colectiva Nº 9 Año 5, pp 26-45. Sojo, Ana (1990), “Naturaleza y selectividad de la política social”, Revista de la CEPAL, Nº 41, Santiago de Chile, pp. 183-199. Sojo, Ana (2003), “Vulnerabilidad social, aseguramiento y diversificación de riesgos en América Latina y el Caribe” in Revista de la CEPAL Nª 80, pp 121-140. Sojo, Ana (2007), “La trayectoria del vínculo entre políticas selectivas contra la pobreza y políticas sectoriales” in Revista de la CEPAL Nª 91, pp 111-131. Stampini, Marco & Tornarolli, Leopoldo (2012), The growth of conditional cash transfers in Latin America and the Caribbean: did they go too far? Inter-American Development Bank Social Sector Social Protection and Health Division POLICY BRIEF No. No. IDB-PB-185 http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=37306295 (Access 15/09/2014).