Department of Sociology, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Br J Sociol. 2024 Sep;75(4):420-434. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.13093. Epub 2024 Apr 8.
A variety of theories have been proposed to explain why states pass legislation to regulate professional groups, and why, more recently, they have acted to curtail professional privileges. While these theories have drawn attention to the importance of power dynamics and public protection, among other factors, the role of political interests has been downplayed. This article builds on ecological theory to argue that, with some modifications, the theory illuminates the centrality of state-profession relations and politics to regulatory change. The theory is applied to a case study of regulatory change in British Columbia, Canada impacting resources-sector professions, with particular attention to the controversies and political considerations that shaped reform. The case study suggests that when the political and professions ecologies are overlapping and symbiotic, as they were in BC, a challenge in the political ecology can implicate professions, prompting a solution that brings change within both ecologies.
已经提出了各种理论来解释为什么国家会通过立法来监管专业团体,以及为什么最近他们采取行动来限制专业特权。虽然这些理论引起了人们对权力动态和公众保护等因素的重视,但政治利益的作用却被低估了。本文以生态理论为基础,认为该理论在一定程度上阐明了国家与专业关系以及政治对监管变革的重要性。该理论适用于不列颠哥伦比亚省加拿大资源行业专业监管变革的案例研究,特别关注塑造改革的争议和政治考虑。案例研究表明,当政治和职业生态系统重叠且共生时,就像在不列颠哥伦比亚省那样,政治生态系统中的一个挑战可能会牵连到专业人员,促使他们提出解决方案,在两个生态系统中都带来变革。