循证实践与关怀伦理:“什么有效”还是“什么重要”?

Evidence-based practice and the ethics of care: ‘What works’ or ‘what matters’?

HUMAN RELATIONS · 2021
被引 37
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

通过警务行动研究项目数据,揭示循证实践口号“什么有效”与现实之间的张力,并引入关怀伦理整合“什么重要”,强调关系性专长、实践推理和批判探究对社会干预实践的重要性。

Abstract

This article considers why and how evidence-based practice has become distorted in practice, and what to do about it. We present qualitative data from an action research project in policing to highlight tensions between the rhetoric and reality of evidence-based practice, and the ways in which evidence-based practice’s seductive catchphrase ‘what works’ is being understood and applied. Through the lens of care ethics, we integrate ‘what matters’ with ‘what works’, and ‘what matters/works here’ with ‘what matters/works everywhere’. This approach recognizes relational expertise, practical reasoning and critical inquiry as vital for evidence-based practice in practices of social intervention. Drawing on key care ethics motifs, we suggest that care is the ethical scaffolding upon which social justice relies, and hence crucial to organs of security, peacekeeping and law enforcement. From this position, we argue that policing might renegotiate its difficult relationship with the particular, recasting it from something uncomfortably discretionary (the maverick cop) and shameful (an individualized blame culture) into something that underpins and enhances police professionalism. While developed in a policing context, these reflections have a broader relevance for questions of professional legitimacy and credibility, especially within the ‘new professions’, and the costs of privileging any one type of understanding over others.

循证实践关怀伦理警务专业合法性社会干预