Power and empowerment in nursing: a fourth theoretical approach

Title.  Power and empowerment in nursing: a fourth theoretical approach. Aim.  This paper is a discussion of the use of poststructuralism as a means of exploring power and empowerment in nursing. Background.  Power and empowerment are well‐researched areas of nursing practice, but the issue of how t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of advanced nursing 2008-04, Vol.62 (2), p.258-266
Hauptverfasser: Bradbury-Jones, Caroline, Sambrook, Sally, Irvine, Fiona
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Sambrook, Sally
Irvine, Fiona
description Title.  Power and empowerment in nursing: a fourth theoretical approach. Aim.  This paper is a discussion of the use of poststructuralism as a means of exploring power and empowerment in nursing. Background.  Power and empowerment are well‐researched areas of nursing practice, but the issue of how to empower nurses and patients continues to cause debate. Power and empowerment are complex issues and other researchers have provided some clarity by proposing three theoretical approaches: critical social theory, organizational theory and social psychological theory. We support their work and propose an additional poststructural approach as a means of analyzing power and empowerment in nursing. Discussion.  The concept of power in nursing may be critiqued by drawing on the work of Michel Foucault and paying particular attention to two areas: disciplinary power and knowledge/power relationships. Foucault’s contention was that behaviour is standardized through disciplinary power and that power and knowledge are intertwined. Nurses who seek an understanding of empowerment must first grasp such workings as hierarchical observation, normalizing judgement, the examination, and power/knowledge relationships, and that cognizance of such issues can promote nursing practice that is empowering. They need to adopt a more critical stance to understanding power and empowerment in nursing, and one way of fostering such criticism is to view nursing practice through a poststructural lens. Conclusion.  A poststructural approach merits a place alongside other approaches to understanding power and empowerment in nursing.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2008.04598.x
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Employee empowerment
empowerment
Foucault
Humans
Interprofessional Relations
Models, Psychological
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing administration
Nursing Theory
poststructuralism
power
Power (Psychology)
Self Concept
Social psychology
title Power and empowerment in nursing: a fourth theoretical approach
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