Monday, 12 August 2013
Saturday, 10 August 2013
Social Change and Our Part in It
Ooh, the suspense ... it has moved to here http://paulcairney.wordpress.com/2013/08/10/social-change-and-our-part-in-it/
Friday, 9 August 2013
Tuesday, 6 August 2013
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Tuesday, 23 July 2013
How do people consume your research? A short video, on tobacco and alcohol policy, requiring attention and feedback
This is a first draft of a simple video I am doing with Tereza Procházková @ZasCreativeBag to accompany a blog post I did on the differences between tobacco and alcohol policies in the UK. I wouldn't mind some feedback (here or to @cairneypaul) on it before I ask to have it tweaked then embedded in the proper post (although, realistically, it's feedback for the next one, if there is a next one). From looking at it myself, I know that I try to pack a lot of information into 3 minutes (perhaps a bit like an inexperienced lecturer trying to tell students everything) and so the pictures and audio come thick and fast. Next time, I will speak more slowly. But maybe it still works because it is accompanied by a blog post with all of the information. Maybe you listen to the 3 minutes then decide if you want to fill in the blanks by reading the full post (and then maybe the full paper). My partner tells me that I take a while to get to the point and that there need to be more punchy bullet point moments (I didn't get too offended). Would you agree? There is also a bit of a skip in the audio towards the end (a big problem?), and I trail off at the very end (to press the stop button on the ipad). Note that I am not Glaswegian - the Irvine/ Ayrshire accent is a wee bit different. Polite comments on my voice/ pronunciation also welcome.
The post can be found here: http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/archives/34735. If the video doesn't play, you can get it here on youtube - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fujeajKKa-E or here:
UPDATE: here is the more polished version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6pkPTPohas
For more discussion of the 'impact' side of the work, see: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/how-do-people-read-your-research.html
and http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/a-picture-of-pathways-to-impact.html
The post can be found here: http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/archives/34735. If the video doesn't play, you can get it here on youtube - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fujeajKKa-E or here:
UPDATE: here is the more polished version:
For more discussion of the 'impact' side of the work, see: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/how-do-people-read-your-research.html
and http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/a-picture-of-pathways-to-impact.html
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
How Do People Read Your Research?
People may nod at you and say 'yes, hmm, very interesting', but do they understand what you are saying (in a satisfying way)? I would like to know if someone could read something of mine, write down the key points and then explain them back to me in a way that I recognised. It needn't be a regurgitation (which is not what I do when I read the work of others) but I'd like to think that they took the key points I tried to convey, with no major misinterpretations. That's one sensible interpretation of 'impact', isn't it? So, for me, these drawings by @ZasCreativeBag are excellent. A drawing also condenses an argument - and puts all the points together in one page - in a way that might take me 1000-2000 words. They may not convey the same points entirely, but they do a decent job of reinforcing the argument (I hope).
Here (with a longer explanation) are some earlier examples (I did not get the grant!) and the most recent example is below (for the blogpost, see here)
Here (with a longer explanation) are some earlier examples (I did not get the grant!) and the most recent example is below (for the blogpost, see here)
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Notes From a Conference Part 1: Arrogance and Recognition
It’s hard to tell if people are (a) predisposed to arrogance at an early age and/ or (b) if they develop this trait as they age and become more powerful or better recognised in the profession. All I know is that some (generally well established) academics appear to ‘less modest’ than others. So, I have this general angst about becoming (or, at least, appearing) more arrogant when engaging with other people and, crucially, not knowing it. This is perhaps more of a concern for people in subjects like social science where some conference discussions will be about challenging the statements, methods and views of other people. There is a fine line between a positive challenge and a negative dismissal, so we need a high degree of self-awareness to reflect on our behaviour and ask ourselves if we have crossed a line. This is particularly important:
· In international conferences where people bring
different levels of expectation about politeness. For example, many UK based
scholars may be less likely to start their comments with ‘thank you for your
interesting paper’. Instead, like me, they may see a strong (thoughtful)
challenge as a strong signal of respect (since, it shows that you care enough
about the paper to listen and engage in a meaningful way).
· If you are in a room with a dominant view – it
is only by being open to opinions from others that you can avoid being close
minded and dismissive of things you don’t agree with initially but might
appreciate if you allow yourself the time to listen and reflect (something that
is too easy to dismiss if you are in a room with people that largely agree with
you).
· If we identify the subtext to many conference
proceedings: the desire to make one’s name by presenting papers and engaging
with the papers of others. I have said to a few colleagues that a large
conference is really a battle for attention and recognition, wrapped up in the
pretence of positive discussion, and only most of that statement is
tongue-in-cheek.
It is in that context that I’d
like to describe the crumbs of recognition I got at a recent conference
(International Conference on Public Policy). I figure that, if arrogance comes
with age, I’d better write this down before it’s too late. The thing about this
profession is that it is so full of negative signals from other people:
critical reviews of articles; negative signals on promotion prospects;
deflating rejections for grant proposals; and, so on (if you are trying to do a
PhD, we might add deflating rejections for funding that threaten the completion
of the project; if you are not a white man, we might discuss further obstacles
relating to relative success rates). So, when people actually come up to you
and say that they have enjoyed something you’ve written (and can discuss it
with you in some depth, largely proving that they are not just being polite),
it’s brilliant. There will be better descriptions out there, but ‘brilliant’
will do for now. The same goes for general name recognition – there is just
something about people seeing your name badge and recognising your name (it
beats the quite-regular semi-sneer when people can’t be arsed with you). So,
the benefit of not being fully arrogant (yet) is that you can enjoy these
crumbs of comfort in a rather disproportionate way. This may be some comfort to
the PhD student wondering if it’s all worth it - in some cases it might be.
See also Part 2 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-2-what-are.html
See also Part 3 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-3.html
See also Part 2 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-2-what-are.html
See also Part 3 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-3.html
Notes From a Conference Part 2: What are They For?
It’s probably not a good idea to reflect on a conference too close to its end, when you are tired and homesick, but I’m going to do it anyway. As with many large international conferences I’ve been to, my usual response is to wonder if it was worth the bother of being away from home, away from my family, (*middle class problems alert*) in a crap hotel room and faced with the need to sit, stand, listen and talk politely for such a long time – when the time could be put to better use at home (doing or writing research and/ or watching the tennis/ football). So, what are the most important benefits?
1.
Meeting people, new and old. Many of us will
tend to have most contact with people by email, so it is good to get the time
to have an actual conversation with people (often from different countries). In
my case, I had a decent mix: meeting a longstanding co-author to discuss more
projects; meeting a new co-author to discuss our chapter; meeting a handful of
new people that I’d like to keep in touch, and do research, with; and having a
few quick discussions with one of my PhD students off campus and in a new
atmosphere (and immediately before and after her paper).
2.
Having your ego stroked a little bit and getting
yourself known a bit better (see previous blog).
3.
Giving you a deadline to complete a piece of
work in a way that other deadlines can’t do (for many, if not most, people the
thought of talking mince for 15 minutes in front of your peers is not an
enjoyable prospect).
I think these are the least
important benefits:
1.
Getting new information from presentations and/
or papers. The quality of conference papers and presentations is so mixed that
it’s difficult to justify the time spent reading and listening. In fact, my
increasing impression is that many, if not most, people are *not* reading
papers and listening (indeed, you can tell that many people are not listening
because they have their laptops out and are replying to emails or having a sly
look at the news and sport). This problem can be compounded by inadequate rooms
(I had one seminar for 20 people in a 900 seat lecture hall; I had another in a
room where you could only *just* hear the speaker if no-one moved).
2.
Getting feedback on papers. Sometimes this
works. In fact, for one of my papers the audience was 7 people (it was at
8.30am, the day after the conference dinner, which ended after midnight),
allowing us to engage in an *actual conversation* (the other was about 30
people, which was quite good too, but in a different way – it allows you to see
if you can give convincing replies). Sometimes, it doesn’t work. In fact,
sometimes (for example if you are on a panel of 4) no-one will ask you a
question and you will wonder why you bothered.
3.
Finding that all the interesting papers are all
being given at the same time (and. If you are very unlucky, at the same time as
your presentation).
In other words, the
benefit of a conference may not relate to the thing that seems to drive it and
take up most of its time. Maybe the notional equivalent in politics is either
the international summit (a set-piece event where most of the work is done in
advance and the most productive discussions are ‘away from the table’) or the
well-attended state funeral (which may involve fewer speeches and gives people
the chance to talk without any weight of expectation). See also part 1 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-1-arrogance.html
See also part 3 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-3.html
Notes From a Conference Part 3: The International Conference on Public Policy
The ICPP (Grenoble) symbolised
both the best and worst aspects of scholarship. The best bits include:
·
The unexpected levels of attendance (900) –
which showed many of us (perhaps used to the limited focus on policymaking at
general conferences) that we had many international colleagues engaged in
similar research.
·
The ability to see beyond your specialism and
listen to plenary discussions and panels on topics you may not consider in your
day-to-day research.
·
The opportunities to meet people, exchange ideas
and make research plans.
But, being a tired, dour Scot, I
was struck mostly by the problems symbolised by the conference:
1.Are we talking *to* or *past*
each other?
The plenary on the so called
‘tribes’ of policymaking (IAD, new institutionalism, ACF, etc.) involved a
brief discussion, by each representative of a ‘tribe’, of the first principles
of each approach – without giving much information about how they relate to
each other. This is characteristic of much of the literature which involves
specialisation. Such specialisation is often valuable and necessary - it is perhaps
only when we immerse ourselves in, and fully understand, an approach that we
can assess its merits and relate it to other approaches. However, it also seems
parochial if there is a limited level of self-awareness and a tendency to
ignore other approaches. Watching the event, you would struggle to identify a
sense of *general purpose*. For me, the idea behind specialisation is that we are
boundedly rational – we cannot produce all research ourselves. So, we produce
some work and rely on others to produce the rest. Then we try to compare our
experiences and: (a) explore or ability to generalise from those combined
experiences; and (b) explore our ability to accumulate knowledge from a range
of studies. This exchange of ideas and information will not be effective if we
are all talking a different language; if we don’t know how to communicate our
findings (and their significance) to each other in a meaningful way. Maybe the
plenary served that purpose by reminding us of the wider world out there, but
you would have to be a super-positive person to come to that conclusion.
2.Are we even talking about the
same thing?
I was often struck by the
relative lack of cohesion of many panels even when they came under a common
banner. So, they were not only
describing very different case studies but also very different ways to
understand them. Again, this can produce a degree of innovative thinking when
we consider new possibilities. However, it can also make you wonder if you can
slip out of the room when no-one is watching.
3. Self-contradictory case study
approaches.
The papers were either
mainly-theoretical or contained a theoretical and case-study-based empirical
section. What follows is a caricature of some presentations to make a broad
point:
·
First, they say that existing theories cannot
fully explain their case study.
·
So, they propose a ‘new’ theory which it
explains it better.
·
Then, they might imply that this new theory has
a more general application.
The overall effect can appear to
be contradictory: no theory can explain my case because it is (a) more
complicated than theory suggests; and/ or (b) the case has some unusual
elements that are difficult to explain. If so, such papers perpetuate the
problem – we are forever seeking novel and parsimonious theories to explain
many cases, only to be faced with complexity and a significant level of
non-comparability when we try to apply them in different cases.
In that light, my preference is
for a problem-focused approach to presentation:
·
Talk about a real research problem – what do you
want to explain?
·
Talk about the insights that one or more
theories can give you when you seek explanation.
·
Accept that theories are simplifications to aid
general explanation; don’t express mock surprise when they fail to explain
everything. This is just not possible.
·
If a key tenet of public policy studies is that
politics and policymaking vary from issue to issue (and country), we should not
be surprised that a theory based on some issues and countries does not map
directly onto others. The same can be said for the case study – don’t just
assume that the usefulness of a new or old theory in one case applies to
another. Instead, reflect on the ways in which your case compares to the cases
described by other studies.
We might then want to talk about
the research outcomes. Such conversations require a common language – a requirement
that is not served well by the constant pursuit of new theories and a rejection
of the old. If we are constantly claiming to be reinterpreting the fundamental
nature of policymaking, how can we communicate our findings to each other?
Instead, we can pursue a common
language by focusing on what Peter John describes as the five ‘core causal
processes’ in public policy. We may say that policymakers operate within the
following context:
1.
Institutional – they are influenced by the
(written and unwritten; formal/ statutory and informal) rules and norms within
systems and organisations.
2.
Agenda-setting – policymakers are ‘boundedly
rational’, prompting them to (a) pay more attention to some issues and
solutions at the expense of most others; (b) understand issues in a biased way.
So, the way in which they act follows from the way in which they understand,
interpret, define or frame their problems and actions.
3.
Networks/ Subsystem – policy is devolved from
elected policymakers to bureaucrats who consult with groups to gather
information and advice. This low level of government may be where most policy
work is processed. Some groups are more powerful than others; they are
considered more worthy of attention than others. Relationships develop between
some groups and civil servants and these networks often represent the main arena
in which information is exchanged, then given to elected policymakers (or,
choices are made on their behalf by civil servants operating in these networks).
4.
Socio-economic – for example, some problems may
appear more pressing than others, and some solutions may be more or less
attractive, because they are linked closely to the economic environment. Or,
demographic change presents new problems. Or, a policymaker’s understanding of
social attitudes may underpin their policy strategy. In each case, policymakers
interpret a range of policy conditions, or operate in policy environments, that
appear to present obstacles to, or opportunities for, action.
5.
The role of ideas – policymaking is underpinned
by the beliefs present within political systems, such as the world views of
policymakers or the actors most influential in that system. We talk of ‘core
beliefs’, ‘paradigms’ and ‘policy monopolies’ to describe the fundamental importance
of a common understanding of the world that may be so dominant that it is taken
for granted. We also talk about ideas as new ways of thinking about problems,
and solutions, which challenge such fundamental beliefs (often following a
period of ‘learning’ from the past, other issues or other political systems)..
We may have different interpretations
of these concepts and they all overlap (the links between 2 and 5 may seem most
obvious; we may also say that institutions are shared beliefs; that close
networks are based on common understandings; that people interpret
socioeconomic conditions and new ideas; and so on). Of course they do – these
are analytical simplifications not present in the ‘real world’. Further, we may
say that some issues transcend these factors – such as the role of gender
inequalities which may be present in institutions, shape the way that people
understand problems, influence the consultation process, and underpin belief
systems.
However, at least they give us
the chance for a common starting point for discussion and explanation. We might
even say that our reference to these factors represents the product of our
accumulation of knowledge in the field (or not).
4. What is a satisfactory
explanation? Can we ever agree?
In a broader sense, we are talking
about our ability to agree about what constitutes a satisfactory explanation. In
my opinion, a convincing explanation comes from a detailed account of
policymaking (stability and instability; policy continuity and change) with reference
to all five of these causal factors. We discuss their individual importance –
as an analytical device to aid the simplification of complex issues – and
discuss the extent which outcomes are caused by the interplay between all five.
So, for example, institutions alone do not explain behaviour (unless we use a
ridiculously broad definition of an institution) and neither does the
socioeconomic context (however pressing), the ideational context, or the strong
relationships between some groups and government - but a combination of such
factors may help explain why policymakers act in certain ways (and perhaps why
their actions are more or less acceptable or successful).
The alternative is to specialise;
to focus on certain aspects of this process to gain a better understanding of
them. This is good too, but not if it comes at the expense of the bigger
picture (or, if we simply try to quantify the relative effect of one factor in
a naïve way – which, in many cases, misses the point of complex explanation). It
would be good for presenters on particular topics to reflect, however briefly,
on how these topics relate to the concerns of others – to recognise that they
know a lot about the foot but that the heart might be important too.
5. Are we really talking to each
other? How do we exchange information in a meaningful way?
I attended every possible session
in the ICPP and so I received a concentrated dose of the tendency of presenters
to give out information in an unsatisfactory way. My pet peeve is slides of
very small numbers which are presented for a few seconds without explanation;
without the presenter taking the time to give them meaning. For me, this tops
the presenter-reads-every-word-on-the-powerpoint approach (because at least, in
that case, you can close your eyes to listen). This is not good.
It is perhaps a symptom if the
wider tendency to cram a ridiculous amount of presentations into short slots –
either the 4 papers/ 2 discussant approach (90 minutes) of APSA or the 5 papers
(2 hours) at the ICPP. Who can possibly sit through all of those presentations
without daydreaming or nodding off? It
is also a symptom of the lack of awareness of the needs of an audience. If we
are there to talk to each other (and not simply represent an awake audience), we
need the time to discuss papers rather than just listen to them. Only then will
we know if the information we present is useful, or if the round of applause is
really just a symbol of audience relief.
6. Last but not least – too many
men.
Even I (a male, white, middle
class and increasingly privilege professor who benefits from these
inequalities) am getting tired of seeing panels that are all, or predominantly,
male. Most plenary sessions were embarrassingly male and, when the photos go on
the web, will not serve as a good advertisement for the profession (although we cannot simply blame the organisers - http://occamstypewriter.org/athenedonald/2013/06/24/all-male-invited-speakers-its-complicated/).
See also Part 1 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-1-arrogance.html
See also Part 2 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-2-what-are.html
See also Part 1 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-1-arrogance.html
See also Part 2 http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/notes-from-conference-part-2-what-are.html
Sunday, 23 June 2013
Scottish Labour and Independence
Since I was writing about Man of Steel today, I thought I’d
keep up the fanciful theme by making a simple recommendation for Scottish
Labour. What I think they should do is to start talking about the future of an
independent Scotland in terms of old Labour values. They should say that independence
would give them a chance to test the myth that Scotland is socially democratic.
They should promise a Nordic style programme of redistribution and
universalism. They should say that public services, free at the point of sale,
are expensive and that we can only afford them if we change taxes. They should
say that they are committed to reducing inequalities, so those taxes will be super-progressive.
This is the solution to the current problem of devolution: we give the
universal services to all without charging the better-off more to use them. If
the Yes vote does not tip 50% in 2014, Scottish Labour can then say ‘well, we
offered that new Scotland and you didn’t want it’. Then, they can charge for
all sorts of services, arguing that if people wanted universalism they should
have voted for a government with the willingness and ability to match it with redistribution.
Man of Steel
Superman might look like just an
exciting* film about a superhero, but it’s really a** profound statement about the
environment, feminism and anti-Social-Darwinism hidden within an action film. It
starts by showing us the unfortunate consequences of the hubris of a government
intent on solving its environmental and energy problems with technology. Then,
we quickly move on to the idea that Krypton is the logical conclusion of
eugenics – every child is created to serve a purpose. Superman’s*** mum and dad
then have a natural birth to give him the choice to be different. It’s the
classic ‘we are not biologically determined’ argument (which reinforces the
decent range of relatively strong female characters, including Lois Lane who saves
the day before being saved). The clearest statements are easily missed because
they come towards the end when everyone is getting thrown through walls. One is
when Faora-Ul is about to throw Superman somewhere and she tells him that her
race is superior because it has evolved to the point where they are better
warriors because they (a) are more powerful and able to survive in their
environment; and (b) they have fewer feelings and connections to others (this sounds
like Social Darwinism but, confusingly, not necessarily what Darwin was going
on about). Another is when Zod justifies
his behaviour in terms of being designed with a particular purpose (and the
consequences of achieving his aim are largely irrelevant). Finally, it gives some men something to aspire
to – big muscles and being nice (and, if possible, destroying satellites
designed to spy on him).
*No, it’s not boring.
**Perhaps unintentionally
***I know he isn’t yet Superman
and they refuse to call him that. Symbol of hope my arse.
Friday, 21 June 2013
Alcohol: the Harmful versus Healthy Debate
I predict a lot of debate and attention to the idea that alcohol consumption is
healthy or harmful. A key strategy for public health groups and other advocates
of further alcohol controls (such as a minimum unit price of alcohol) is to
reframe the debate - by challenging the idea that alcohol can be healthy, in
particular circumstances, if consumed in small amounts. A key strategy for the alcohol
industry is to maintain that image so that they can argue that alcohol policy
should be targeted at problem drinkers only. One is a public health argument
calling for general policy measures that influence the drinking habits of the
population (e.g. raise prices, ban promotion). The other is an individualised
argument calling for specific measures that deal with particular people (e.g.
provide NHS services for alcoholism; change police powers to deal with
anti-social behaviour). So, the *way we understand the evidence* is key battle
ground in the policy debate. That is why you will find public health groups so
bothered by the fact that the industry takes such an important part in the
production, dissemination and interpretation of the evidence within government and
when communicating with the public (e.g. drinkaware.org is funded by the
industry).
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/why-is-there-more-tobacco-control.html
The obvious contrast, at least in the UK, is between alcohol and tobacco.
In the latter, in the not-too-distant past, tobacco companies had similar
amounts of joy in government and public circles: funding scientific research;
arguing that the link between smoking (and then passive smoking) and ill health
was not proven; and portraying the issue as one of individual choice based on
their thoughts on the evidence and how they might way it up against their enjoyment
of smoking. Key strides were made in tobacco control when the evidence on harm
(from smoking and passive smoking) were ‘set in stone’ within government and stated
unequivocally to the public. A good example is in health education before and
after tobacco company influence. In the heyday of smoking (when men were men),
the public health advice was overshadowed by tobacco advertising. It was also
more likely to be harm reduction in nature – e.g. smoke pipes rather than
cigarettes (not too long after companies introduced healthful (not really) filtertips
and moved from high to low tar). Then, the health advice changed markedly to
reflect a ‘no safe level’ message (as in the health advice suggesting that a
move from high to low tar was like jumping from the 38th floor of a building
rather than the 39th).
Now, in my day, as an undergraduate, we might try to interpret that sort
of story in terms of early insights on Power by people like Bachrach and Baratz. Power is not simply about visible conflicts in which one group wins and
another loses (such as in a policy debate in government). Rather, groups may
exercise power to reinforce social attitudes (perhaps to make sure that the
debate does not get that far). If the weight of public opinion is against
government action, maybe governments will not intervene. In this case, if the
vast majority of people think that moderate alcohol consumption is healthy (or
not harmful), they may not support control measures that affect the whole
population. In fact, it is a measure of public health group success that it even *occurs* to us to consider the issue. Still, a key part of the minimum-unit-price debate is that it
punishes responsible drinkers as much as problem drinkers. This will not be
such a powerful argument if the vast majority of the public begins to believe
that we are *all* problem drinkers (well, apart from me – I don’t touch the
stuff). See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/why-is-there-more-tobacco-control.html
Wednesday, 19 June 2013
The IndyRef and the Scottish Parliament
I have done a 3-minute podcast on this topic and it can be found here -
or go here: http://paulcairney.podbean.com/2013/06/19/the-indyref-and-the-scottish-parliament/
I hope to make it a bit more exciting soon, but this will have to do just now.
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/testing-testing-podcast-on-independence.html
If you want to spoil the magic and just read the 'script', here it is:
or go here: http://paulcairney.podbean.com/2013/06/19/the-indyref-and-the-scottish-parliament/
I hope to make it a bit more exciting soon, but this will have to do just now.
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/testing-testing-podcast-on-independence.html
If you want to spoil the magic and just read the 'script', here it is:
A debate on constitutional change provides the main (or
only) opportunity to discuss its constitution. A constitution can be a written
document with bells and whistles or just an acknowledged set of relationships
between governing organisations and “the people”.
Yet, we have not seen the same debate around independence as
we did around devolution.
Remember all the hopes associated with the push for
devolution:
·
In general, a new form of politics to get away
from all that was wrong with Westminster
·
A new and more proportional electoral system
·
A new relationship between the government, the
parliament and the people
·
A move away from top-down government
policymaking
·
A rejection of adversarial and excessively
partisan politics
·
An effective unicameral system
·
A chance for a wide range of (previously
excluded) groups and individuals to have a routine say in policy
·
A chance for MSPs to spend quality time in their
constituencies rather than sitting around being whipped in Parliament
·
A chance to redress ridiculous imbalances in
representation, particularly for women
A lot of these aims proved to be unrealistic, but at least
we talked about ideals rather than just getting bogged down in petty disputes.
In fact, now is the only time in which we can properly
reassess devolution and ask ourselves if we want to simply keep and build on
existing arrangements or seek to change them. Obvious examples include:
·
Should we keep the mixed member electoral system
rather than STV?
·
Are we content with only one-third of MSPs being
women?
The less visible question is:
·
What do we do about the Scottish Parliament?
·
The problem is that there is not a ‘power
sharing’ relationship between government and parliament
·
The government makes policy and the parliament
examines it
·
It does not have the resources to examine it
well
·
There are too few MSPs and too few staff
·
So, the Parliament examines *some* policy, to
some extent, and has to ignore most of it
·
This happened under all forms of government so
far: coalition majority, single party minority, single party majority
·
So, if we simply add more powers or full powers
onto the current system, its ability to scrutinise government will be much more
limited
·
Now is the only time to discuss what we want to
do about that
·
Whatever you think about independence debate, it
may be the only event that allows us to re-examine the role of the Scottish
Parliament and do something about it
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
Testing, testing, podcast on independence
This is a 10-minute podcast on Scottish independence - What Does it Mean and What Are The Big Questions? - recorded on my Ipad. The production values are fairly low and, on two occasions, it seems to flicker a bit (much like in those horror or sci-fi films where things go a little bit, spookily, wrong). I also get a text which distracts me a bit. Then I sound like I am getting bored and more sarcastic from 8 minutes (any of my former students will be used to that). Other than that, it is OK, as long as you like the Andy Murray style monotone (although our accents are very, very different).
You can also get it here: http://paulcairney.podbean.com/2013/06/18/scottish-independence/
The book is out in August and it won't really be £25 - http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=569083
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/the-indyref-and-scottish-parliament.html
You can also get it here: http://paulcairney.podbean.com/2013/06/18/scottish-independence/
The book is out in August and it won't really be £25 - http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=569083
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/the-indyref-and-scottish-parliament.html
Monday, 17 June 2013
Why is there more tobacco control policy than alcohol control policy in the UK?
The obvious answer is that drinking
is less bad for you than smoking. Or, if you are the optimistic sort, drinking
is really, really, really, really, really good for you – mm, mm, delicious and nutritious.
And it’s cool. And it’s sexy and it makes you sexy. Especially when you are
pissed.
See also: http://paulcairney.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/alcohol-harmful-versus-healthy-debate.html
Compare with: http://velvetgloveironfist.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/the-real-reason-for-public-smoking-bans.html and http://dickpuddlecote.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/an-lse-guide-on-how-to-denormalise.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+DickPuddlecote+(Dick+Puddlecote)
The non-obvious answer is that,
although the same sort of public health evidence has been produced to suggest
that: (a) both smoking and drinking are unhealthy; and, (b) both should be
controlled using similar instruments – the alcohol-is-unhealthy evidence is
less accepted in government and alcohol control policies are a harder sell (for
now). Alcohol can still be advertised,
there is less tax on booze and the alcohol industry has a regular say in
the interpretation of the evidence (and what we should do about it).
The aim of this ICPP paper (link)
is to explain the difference between policy choices in tobacco and alcohol. It
says: here is what would have to happen for alcohol control to mimic tobacco
control (I do the same in a comparison of tobacco controls in different countries
here). We can break the policy process down into five key factors:
1.
Institutional change. Government departments,
and other organisations focused on health policy, would take the main
responsibility for alcohol control, largely replacing departments focused on
finance, trade, industry, tourism and employment (and crime).
2.
Paying attention to, and ‘framing’ the problem. The
government would no longer view alcohol primarily as a product with economic
value, central to the ‘night time economy’.
It would be viewed primarily as a public health problem; a set of
behaviours and outcomes to be challenged.
This happened with tobacco, but it is trickier in alcohol because the
government may only be worried about aspects of alcohol consumption (such as
the binge drinking and anti-social behaviour of certain individuals) rather
than the broader notion of public health.
3.
The balance of power between participants. The department of health would consult public
health and medical groups at the expense of groups representing the alcohol
industry. This is central to the type of evidence it gathers, the interpretation
of the evidence, and the advice it receives.
4.
The socioeconomic context. The economic benefit of alcohol consumption
would fall (or, the tax revenue would become less important to the Treasury), the
number of drinkers would fall and opposition to alcohol control would decline
(although it already seems fairly low).
5.
The role of beliefs and knowledge. The scientific evidence linking alcohol
consumption to ill health would have to be accepted and ‘set in stone’ within government
circles. The most effective policies to
reduce alcohol consumption would also be increasingly adopted and transferred
across countries.
Change in these factors would be
mutually reinforcing. For example, an increased
acceptance of the scientific evidence helps shift the way that governments ‘frame’
or understand the alcohol policy problem.
The framing of alcohol as a health problem allows health departments to
take the policy lead. Alcohol control
and alcohol use go hand in hand: a decrease in drinking rates reduces the
barriers to alcohol control; more alcohol control means fewer drinkers (or less
drinking).
It is tempting to think that this
sort of process is more likely under Labour and less likely under the Conservatives
– and there is some evidence to back up this argument. However, the point of
the paper is that these long term processes develop during the terms of both
parties. Major policy change, of the level we have witnessed in tobacco (but
not as much in alcohol), takes several decades. Indeed, you can be suitably
impressed or depressed with my hunch that alcohol control is at least a decade
(if not two or more) behind tobacco.
Compare with: http://velvetgloveironfist.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/the-real-reason-for-public-smoking-bans.html and http://dickpuddlecote.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/an-lse-guide-on-how-to-denormalise.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+DickPuddlecote+(Dick+Puddlecote)
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
Making Sense of Policymaking: why it's always someone else's fault and nothing ever changes
I am writing a paper about the ability of policy scholars to describe
and explain policymaking in a way that is understandable to policymakers and
practitioners (it will appear here and here). The background discussion is about the extent to which there is
too much jargon in the literature. If so, it may act as a barrier to meaningful
discussions between academics and policymakers (which may be seen as
particularly problematic in this new age of academic ‘impact’). The paper
suggests that many academic insights are useful, as a basis for discussion with
policymakers, if we take the time to discuss them together.
The aim of this post is a bit different: to see if I can summarise and translate
the concepts to the readers of the post *without* any discussion! I will do it
by removing almost all of the jargon from the paper (which often means more
words – the jargon is a useful shorthand). I think that this task is made much
easier by the slow trickle of these ideas into the public consciousness. For
example, one conclusion you can take from the discussion is that a change of
party in government does not produce a massive change in policy. This is
something that you tend to hear in public discussions (although I admit that
the discussions may not draw much from policy theory). So, I will continue this
theme, by outlining some common phrases (associated largely with the pathology
of policymaking) and using policy theory to help explain them in a way that
might, in some cases, make the whole business of government a bit less
disheartening. Or, I will make up these phrases for effect. Definitely one or
the other. I will also put those phrases in capital letters, so that you can
imagine them being shouted by someone looking for attention.
IT’S ALWAYS SOMEONE ELSE’S FAULT – NO ONE EVER TAKES THE BLAME.
I think that you can divide this sort of frustration into two main
parts: ministers generally don’t take the blame for things going wrong; and/ or
no-one seems to get the blame for something going wrong in individual cases
(such as in cases of child cruelty or hospital mismanagement).
The argument with ministers is so strong because we support the idea
that governments are accountable to the public via Parliament. So, ministers
are in charge and they report to Parliament. Or, they get a telling-off from
Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight. Yet, ministers have two good reasons not to take
the blame.
First, policy is often now made at many levels (and types) of
government. For example, something like ‘tobacco policy’ is actually a
collection of policies made by the European Union, UK and, in some cases,
devolved governments (and sometimes local authorities). Policy is also often
carried out by a range of bodies which often operate at ‘arms length’ from
ministers. In some cases, this looks like ministers are simply passing the buck
to other bodies, to avoid making controversial decisions. In others, there is
good reason to maintain these arrangements. My favourite example is in mental
health where there are arms-length bodies there to make sure that doctors and
social workers use the Mental Health Act correctly when they ‘section’ people.
Those bodies have to exert a degree of independence to assure the public that
they are not simply there to back up the decisions of others.
The outcome of these multi-level and arms-length arrangements is that
ministers cannot simply make policy. Instead, they are increasingly obliged to
negotiate policy with a wide range of other bodies.
The second defence for ministers is that they cannot pay attention to all
of the issues for which they are responsible. In fact, they can only pay
attention to a tiny proportion – which makes it entirely plausible for them to
look shocked when a decision, made in their name, has gone badly. This is also
why regular changes of government do not cause wholesale shifts in policy:
most decisions are beyond the reach of ministers. The sheer size of government means that it
could easily become unmanageable. So, governments break policy down into more
manageable departments, and a large number of divisions within departments,
dealing with issues that involve a smaller number of knowledgeable
participants. Most policy is made at a
level of government not particularly visible to the public or Parliament, and
with minimal ministerial or senior civil service involvement. These arrangements exist because there is a
logic to devolving decisions and consulting with certain groups. Ministers rely on their officials for
information and advice. For specialist
issues, those officials rely on specialist organisations. Organisations trade that information and
advice (and other things, such as the ability to generate agreement among large
and influential groups) for access to, and influence within, government.
Ministers are *responsible* for this activity, and they can set the tone of
many of the debates, but they cannot pay attention to everything going on. In
fact, paying attention to one issue means ignoring most others. So, that look
of permanent befuddlement on Newsnight may be entirely understandable.
The other sort of problem relates to things going wrong in local
and health authorities when, for example, a child is not protected or a patient
is treated badly while in care. Organisations hold inquiries and learn lessons
but no one is necessarily strung up and blamed for the problem. The defence in
this case is that public sector professionals do not have the ability to carry
out all of their responsibilities. They are subject to such a wide range of
rules, regulations and expectations from government that they cannot pay
attention to them all (I tend to think of this comic strip, but it’s not that
bad - http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1995-06-25/)
. Instead, they use their judgement to satisfy an adequate proportion of
government objectives. As a result, things go wrong and we find that some
people or organisations did not carry out government policy. In these cases, it
is not easy to blame an organisation – they *have* to ignore some directions to
make sure that they follow others. It is also difficult to blame ministers,
because the chances are that they already have policies in place to deal with
these sorts of things – they just weren’t carried out.
IT’S ONE IDEA AFTER ANOTHER WITH THIS GOVERNMENT – THEY HAVE THE
ATTENTION SPAN OF A GNAT …
The explanation for this practice is quite similar: policymakers can only pay attention to a
small number of the issues for which they are responsible. So, they ignore most and promote a few to the
top of their agenda, often following a major event or a successful media
campaign by certain groups. So, for every issue to which ministers (and senior
civil servants) pay attention, they must ignore (say) 99 others. The tendency to focus on that one issue
*might* produce major policy change when, for example, so much pressure is
required to get ministerial attention that, when they do, it is a bit like a
dam busting; a wide range of people get involved to influence policy in a short
space of time. However, the logical
consequence to their attention to that one issue is that the same thing does
not happen in most other cases. In most cases, it is business as usual, since
so much policymaking is devolved to people who operate out of the public and
political spotlight.
… AND YET NOTHING EVER CHANGES.
I said that this concentrated attention on some issues *might* change
things because it also might not. There are four main reasons to expect less
than radical change following these bursts of attention. First, people might
find that there is no easy solution to the problem receiving so much attention.
Good, sensible, acceptable solutions take time to develop and it is possible
for public and ministerial attention to lurch to another issue before this
problem is solved (or at least solved to the satisfaction of policymakers and
influential groups). Indeed, as silly as it sounds, a key feature of
policymaking is that the solution to a problem may be devised *before* there is
significant attention to the problem. Second, policymakers do not have the
brain power or resources to consider all options and the consequences of their
policies. So, many rely on trial-and-error policymaking or depart from
current policy in a series of steps. For policymakers, this has the added
benefit of reduced controversy: radical policy change always produces winners
and losers; a government could try to impose its will, but this can be
politically expensive and governments can only spend so much. Third,
governments inherit policy before they choose. Any ‘new’ policy is likely to be
a revision of an old one, perhaps following some degree of failure. They might
want to make serious changes, but they are also constrained by decisions made
by governments in the past – decisions that produce organisations, rules,
regulations and employees that are difficult to remove.
Finally, things don’t change overnight because people’s beliefs don’t
change overnight. In most cases, policymakers ‘learn’ from their experience
(which includes their mistakes) but their learning is influenced heavily by the
way that they understand the world. Or, in a wider sense, there may be a
particular understanding of the policy problem, and its solution, that is
promoted by a wide range of powerful groups. Events may draw attention to
policy problems without changing that balance of power or the fundamental
beliefs of those involved. Maybe the most obvious example just now is the
banking crisis which produced some changes but not radical change in the way
that governments treat the financial sector – but the same point could be made
whenever we see crises in areas such as health or education.
WHY DO I FEEL POWERLESS?
The final point to remember is that the study of policy is the study of
power: the relatively powerful and the relatively powerless; the winners and
the losers. Importantly, power is not simply about visible conflicts in which
one group wins and another loses. Rather, it can take at least two other
important forms. First, groups may exercise power to reinforce social
attitudes. If the weight of public opinion is against government action, maybe
governments will not intervene. The classic example is poverty – if most people
believe that it is caused by fecklessness, what is the role of government? In
such cases, power and powerlessness may relate to the (in)ability of groups to
persuade the public, media and/ or government that there is a reason to make
policy; a problem to be solved. In other
examples, the battle may be about the extent to which issues are private (with
no legitimate role for government) or public (and open to legitimate government
action), including: should governments intervene in disputes between businesses
and workers? Should they intervene in disputes between husbands and wives?
Should they try to stop people smoking in places that might be considered
private or public? If you reached this blog via twitter, you will be very
familiar with how this process looks in practice: people make policy
suggestions, they receive some support, then they receive an absolute barrage
of criticism, and often abuse, by others. In this context, groups may be
powerful if they are able to reinforce the anti-policy-change attitudes already
held by many people.
Second, groups may exercise other forms of power to keep an issue off
the government agenda. As I said above, policymakers can only pay attention to
a tiny amount of issues for which they are responsible. So, groups may exercise
power to keep some issues on their agenda at the expense of others. Issues on the agenda are sometimes described
as ‘safe’ – more attention to these issues means less attention to the
imbalances of power within society. Again, if you are a follower of twitter,
you may get the impression that people pay attention to nothing but safe issues
for a few seconds at a time. I’m afraid I can’t do anything to make *that* seem
less dispiriting.
Monday, 27 May 2013
From the archives: two Scotsman articles on pornography in newsagents
To celebrate the new 'The Lose the Lads' Mags' campaign by UK Feminista and Object (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-22674928), here are a couple of older articles on why the campaign is important:
BARE FACED CHEEK
BYLINE: Linda Watson Brown
SECTION: Pg. 6
LENGTH: 1336 words
Jennifer is 17, but looks much younger. She is described as a "sex pixie" but looks tired, small and lost. She has an obsession with the Yorkshire Ripper and is photographed with traditional pornographic props in cliched scenarios.
By manufacturing a "syndrome" from the Lolita myth, GQ is entering dangerous territory. The content of men's magazines has been disturbing since their inception, but the way in which boundaries are being pushed back and taboos questioned is particularly evident in recent months. These publications have been accused of airbrushing thongs and knickers from images of celebrities who have posed for photospreads. Women are constantly reduced to sexually available objects .
The Scotsman July 20, 2000, Thursday
BARE FACED CHEEK
BYLINE: Linda Watson Brown
SECTION: Pg. 6
LENGTH: 1336 words
Jennifer is 17, but looks much younger. She is described as a "sex pixie" but looks tired, small and lost. She has an obsession with the Yorkshire Ripper and is photographed with traditional pornographic props in cliched scenarios.
You'd think you would find the pictures in a top-shelf publication - but this is GQ and it is available in your local supermarket and garage. It is one of the new batch of lads' mags which are read openly by young men who would feel some degree of embarrassment about gaping at Hustler or Playboy on a bus. This month GQ focuses on "the Lolita Syndrome" - the main interview is with Jennifer Ellison from Brookside.
Ellison is not underage, but is dressed in revealing beach and underwear, and is described as part of a tempting band of adolescent girls who should make every man ensure he asks for proof of age. The message is clear - although these young girls are not yet legally sexually available, they are irresistible.
By manufacturing a "syndrome" from the Lolita myth, GQ is entering dangerous territory. The content of men's magazines has been disturbing since their inception, but the way in which boundaries are being pushed back and taboos questioned is particularly evident in recent months. These publications have been accused of airbrushing thongs and knickers from images of celebrities who have posed for photospreads. Women are constantly reduced to sexually available objects .
"There is very little difference between the content of loaded and the more obvious pornographic titles on the market," says Catherine Harper of Scottish Women Against Pornography. "But there is much more dishonesty in how it is dressed up. The covers alone are pushing things every month: it has been crotches in your face for a while. Now the content is taking things to a completely unacceptable level. There is stuff here that would not be allowed elsewhere. What is particularly worrying is that a large number of young men get their information about sex from sources like these."
Despite the fact that there has been little debate about the ways in which men are negatively affected by this type of material, the immediate concern has to be with the messages which are being sold - and this month's commodity is underage sex. GQ summarises instances of desirable young women who have only been made more tempting by the fact that sex with them would not only be illegal, it would be rape and abuse too. Jennifer Ellison is photographed half -naked enjoying childish pursuits - on a slide holding her top off, eating ice cream, and, in one particularly questionable image, on a bike surrounded by "real" children. The text raises still more issues: a ten-year-old girl whispers to Ellison that she looks lovely. Is this what we want our daughters to aspire to? A ten-year-old boy suggests that she show her breasts, and we are expected to snigger at the precocity of his early interest rather than be appalled.
Liz Kelly of the Child & Women Abuse Studies Unit at the University of North London believes the links between pornography - in its many forms - and child abuse are clear. "Child pornography is not a separate and distinct genre," she says. While we can all claim to be horrified by such images, the boundaries are not as clear as we may think. " Playboy is particularly devious - the centrefold is depicted from childhood onwards with captions like 'Age one - Playmate material already'; 'Age three - anytime dad'. Children are sexualised in pornography and women are 'childified' by being made to appear as if they are children."
This is certainly the case in mainstream men's magazines - this month in GQ sees a glorification of pubescent images and full-frontal shots of women without pubic hair who are represented as innocent and angelic.
The sexualisation of children, and the ways in which society has become desensitised to the danger this can cause, has been researched in-depth by Michele Elliot of the children's charity Kidscape. "Children's images are being sexualised because they sell. Without our knowing, soft-core child pornography has crept into our everyday lives and most of us are unaware that this has happened."
The availability of magazines such as GQ and loaded has contributed to that development. They are full of breasts-out, legs-open shots, and generally feature "celebrities" who are put in their place by being reduced to nothing more than tits-and-bum commodities. These images of availability and accessibility may be the choice of the individuals involved - although that too can be debated - but what they contribute to our stock of ideas about sex and sexuality is much more threatening.
"What we are seeing," says Catherine Harper of SWAP, "is the undermining of women - and now children. They are saying: 'It's OK lads, go for it - adolescent girls are tempting, how can you help yourselves?' They are openly advocating abuse. The messages undermines and debases real lives and real experiences, and people need to realise what's going on."
The fact that these publications are so widely available may make many think they must be acceptable. Major supermarket chains have removed "top-shelf" publications but regularly feature lads' mags at checkouts and petrol kiosks. All of those contacted said it was up to consumers to complain. A spokesperson for Asda says: "We always put these magazines out of the reach of children. That's the rule. If customers or shop colleagues complain about something they find offensive, we will act on it immediately. We will not censor magazine selection, but we will give customers what they want. We have boundaries, and we will act on anything people feel strongly about."
Safeway takes a similar position: "We review on a three-monthly basis. If the front cover is explicit, we would put the magazine on the top shelf where children couldn't get at it. If the content is complained about, we would review the situation. We are aware that these magazines can contain issues which are explicit or contentious, and we need to avoid kids browsing through them. We have family shoppers and if there was a serious complaint, we would take immediate action. In the last three or four years, there have been less than five complaints."
It is clear that many people are not complaining because they do not know what is being sold, and yet retailers say that only a few comments are enough to make them review the situation. The lack of control and regulation in this area is startling and the removal of straightforward pornography from major stores has only gone some way toward removing sexually explicit and offensive material from the high street.
Pornography is, and always has been, big business - yet again it seems as if the only way to have an effect will be to make a financial impact, rather than anything as irrelevant as public concern.
This month's mags
GQ devotes over 20 pages to "The Lolita Syndrome" focusing on pubescent full -frontal shots, "reasons why you should always ask for ID", the "nubile innocents" featured in David Hamilton's photography, and overt references to the "indecently young" Brookside actress who has the "face of an angel on a bod made all for sin".
Loaded has a "Pornalikes" features in which readers select their favourite images from pornographic publications featuring celebrity lookalikes. A naked Angelina Jolie is described as "wanting it like a thirsty mule." There is the usual list of B-list celebs naked or in poses clearly taken from pornographic imagery. One TV presenter is asked how much money it would take for her to have sex with convicted paedophile Gary Glitter.
Maxim relies on the usual half (or completely) naked images of women with headlines screaming "Do you want some?" Women are asked whether they would consider lapdancing, innumerable questions about their breasts, and it all ends with six pages of ads for pornography and sex lines.
The Scotsman November 24, 2000, Friday
YOUR CHANCE TO OBJECT AS WH SMITH BRINGS BACK THOSE MAGAZINES
BYLINE: By Linda Watson-Brown
SECTION: Pg. 15
LENGTH: 757 words
I HAD completely forgotten how modern and entertaining pornography could be. Until recently, I had considered it insulting, dangerous and degrading. Thankfully, WH Smith has put me straight on that outmoded perception. Three years ago, it decided to stop selling glossy pictures of women's genitals in its high-street shops. It still distributed the magazines. It still profited enormously from them. But in terms of its family-friendly consumer projection, they disappeared.
Now, WH Smith says it is going to reintroduce pornography to its stores. Apparently, in the three years that we have been without gynaecological illustrations of dehumanised women, things have changed. Pornography is now a heterosexual haven of consensual, post-modern relationships.
The Scotsman November 24, 2000, Friday
YOUR CHANCE TO OBJECT AS WH SMITH BRINGS BACK THOSE MAGAZINES
BYLINE: By Linda Watson-Brown
SECTION: Pg. 15
LENGTH: 757 words
I HAD completely forgotten how modern and entertaining pornography could be. Until recently, I had considered it insulting, dangerous and degrading. Thankfully, WH Smith has put me straight on that outmoded perception. Three years ago, it decided to stop selling glossy pictures of women's genitals in its high-street shops. It still distributed the magazines. It still profited enormously from them. But in terms of its family-friendly consumer projection, they disappeared.
Partially. In terms of the somewhat spurious distinction made between top -shelf magazines and other material, well-known names such as Playboy, Hustler, Men Only, Razzle et al were consigned to the dustbin of unmarketable misogyny. Of course, all that really happened was that they continued to be bought elsewhere - generally provided by the same suppliers - and high-street retailers sold harmful images under other guises, such as lads' mags and photography literature.
Now, WH Smith says it is going to reintroduce pornography to its stores. Apparently, in the three years that we have been without gynaecological illustrations of dehumanised women, things have changed. Pornography is now a heterosexual haven of consensual, post-modern relationships.
Does that make those who find such depictions offensive feel a lot better about its renaissance? The next time you go to the Gyle or the Braehead shopping centres in Edinburgh or Glasgow and you see their awards for family -friendly initiatives, will you have any lingering concerns? Previously there may have been a few worries. After all, "novelty shops" stock bondage tape beside their cuddly toys; Marks and Spencer sell bras for girls who should still be wearing vests; major supermarkets peddle paedophile imagery as they punt GQ and Loaded alongside their groceries and two-faced consumer equality strategies.
But now, how will you reconcile buying your children their Barbie and Action Man comics as they stand next to someone perusing a catalogue of exploitation which ensures the buyer that models are "barely legal"? You could justify it in the same way that you will have to if you are a Daily Express reader, for now its new owner will promote his pornography catalogue alongside OK! and the children's comics he has also founded his empire on.
Or, you could realise that something is intrinsically wrong here. And yes, even if it is boring and unfashionable, you could also wake up to the fact that it is morally reprehensible.
If you agree, I am clearly preaching to the converted. If you disagree, there is probably little I can do until you send me the intellectually-challenged letters raising the same, stultifying points which pro-pornographers always rely on. However, if you're not sure, there are a few things for you to think about.
Pornography is not about simple pictures of naked women. It is central in creating and maintaining sex as a basis for discrimination. It is a systematic practice of exploitation and subordination based on sex, and it harms women, men and children. It produces bigotry and contempt. It justifies aggression and hatred. Like other media messages, pornography reinforces and helps create the idea that women are second-class citizens, and it reinforces distorted notions of women's sexuality.
There will always be women who say that they are not exploited by pornography. Personally, I couldn't care less whether every other woman in the world thinks pornography is great. It offends me and it affects me. As such, I have a right to try to do something about it. WH Smith does not believe I, or anyone like me, will exercise that right. The company has stated that it does not believe any of its customers will protest. Indeed, it has said it thinks the publications will be welcomed. I have been told by most stockists of pornography - whether top-shelf or lads' mag in nature - that people simply do not complain. I have also been told that unless those who do write in give their name, address and telephone number, their letter will go straight in the bin. For many people, this is just another effective way of silencing dissent.
I am happy to act as the conduit here. Send me your letters and your petitions, and I will pass them on to WH Smith on your behalf, with personal details made anonymous. If that seems a bit extreme, perhaps you would rather spend your time preparing the best way to explain the joy of iconoclastic pornographic imagery to your five-year-old next time you go shopping.
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