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This article considers professional youth work in England. It reflects on youth work's persistently anomalous position in the division of labour. Since their achievement of a contested professional status in the 1960s and 1970s, youth workers have pursued an occupational ideology that draws principally on a romantic humanism. Until recently, this provided a relatively stable basis to their practices. Under a dominant contemporary neo-liberalism, influential in different ways across Europe, youth work has been subjected to a range of managerialist practices that have further exposed its ambiguity as a profession. Austerity policy, enacted under the Coalition government, has further weakened professional youth work's position in the welfare division of labour. The article points to resistance to austerity on the part of some youth workers and speculates on the possible future of professional youth work in a policy regime that has little sympathy for the public professions.

Additional author information

Simon Bradford

Simon Bradford is reader in social sciences in the School of Health Sciences and Social Care at Brunel University. His main research interests lie in social policy initiatives that affect young people and communities, the history and organisation of professional work in the public services (especially in education), and aspects of youth culture.

Fin Cullen

Fin Cullen is lecturer in youth work studies at Brunel University. She is UK Local Action Co-ordinator for an international project (EU Daphne funded: http://sites.brunel.ac.uk/gap) developing training to help educators challenge gender-related violence. Her research interests include youth policy, feminist youth work and girls' friendship cultures.

 

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