This edited volume brings together leading international scholars to critically engage with and extend Carol Bacchi's influential 'What's the Problem Represented to Be?' approach, demonstrating its applicability beyond policy documents and across diverse social science disciplines.
Table of Contents:
1. Thinking with the ‘What’s the problem represented to be?’ critical approach to research and analysis - Malin Rönnblom and Rosalind Edwards
PART I: Rethinking WPR
2. What’s the ‘problem’ of ‘underlying health conditions’ represented to be? Applying WPR to concepts - Carol Bacchi and Anne Wilson
3. Comparing and contrasting WPR and CDA: divergent conceptions of discourse and distinct analytical strategies - Jian Wu
4. Genealogy and WPR: the importance of Bacchi’s questions when evoking a genealogical sensibility - Stephen Kelly
PART II: Extending WPR
5. WPR and construction of the object as a lens to understand governing families through AI technologies: combining
epistemologies - Rosalind Edwards and Pamela Ugwudike
6. Where critical hands touch: towards decolonial policy analysis - Amelia Odida
7. Where is the problem represented to be? - Tomas Mitander and Andreas Öjehag Pettersson
8. Emotional problems: poststructural policy analysis and emotional discourses in the case of birth tourism - Stephanie Paterson and Lindsay Larios
9. Winding up the future? The crank radio as policy - Lina Rahm and Jörgen Behrendtz
PART III: Reflecting on WPR
10. Enabling self-problematising? Strategically choosing re-analysis and co-authorship with an attention to difference - Hanne Marlene Dahl
11. Reflecting on the value of the WPR framework as a teaching tool in public policy analysis - John Boswell
12. Doing WPR analysis with practitioners: from emotions to political change - Malin Rönnblom
13. Conclusion: A conversation about thinking with WPR - Malin Rönnblom and Rosalind Edwards
About the Author :
Malin Rönnblom is Professor of Political Science at Karlstad University.
Rosalind Edwards is Professor of Sociology at the University of Southampton.
Review :
'This timely volume reflects the burgeoning of international and interdisciplinary engagements with the WPR approach for critical policy analysis. It will be an invaluable resource for researchers and policy activists.' Susan Goodwin, The University of Sydney
'This expertly curated volume invites readers to rediscover the critical foundations and innovative potential of the WPR approach – an inspiring catalyst for fresh thinking and reflexivity in critical policy research.' Regine Paul, University of Bergen
'As a sophisticated treatise on the existing power and latent potential of the WPR approach, this book will excite anyone interested in the political contingencies of problematisations.' Rebecca Hewer, University of Edinburgh