Managerialism is the institutionalised creation of
risks. It is the enemy of conviviality. Managerialism
is concerned with individuals – indeed, what it sees as rather selfish individuals who
are manipulated through the risks that managerialism creates to behave in
certain ways: wanting certain things, avoiding other things, all for personal fear
of falling victim to one risk or another. The anxieties which are the natural
human response to managerialism’s risks are felt personally. And managerialism
at its worst manipulates individual insecurities in cruel ways which only
through the guile and cunning of clever higher-level risk management avoids the
accusation of ‘victimisation’.
Individual biology is always prone to this sort of
manipulation because fundamentally, it is a manipulation of identity through
altering attachment relationships (I have speculated on this before here: http://dailyimprovisation.blogspot.com/2011/07/listening-to-economy-brief-paper-for.html).
Indeed, managers themselves are prone to managerial manipulation higher up the ‘food-chain’,
and there the anxieties produced by one set of risks can have particularly
pathological consequences further down the system. Anxiety produces rather bad
policy!
Attachments are fundamental in the establishment of identity
and the strengthening of capacity to manage anxiety. Where attachments are
strongest, society is at its most convivial. For Illich, such situations are
the epitome of dignified humanity.
But managerialism seeks to disrupt and sometimes sever
individual attachments to one another. It has found ways of leveraging
technology to help it to do this. It has found in the internet radical ways of
rationalising and organising individualised risk, asserting ‘realities’ which
are not ontologically grounded. It has exploited the resulting alienation to
further its risk-produced manipulations.
Because the whole economy is organised in this way,
individuals appear helpless in the face of these forces. They are deprived of ways of being together because their attachments are subject to managerialism's interference. Not least the
individuals who work or study in modern higher education - particularly in a risk-laden environment of rising fees and economic uncertainty.
But technology has a surprising knack of upsetting the
applecart. Whilst managerialism has leveraged most of the radical technologies
of the last 10 years, its technological foresight is less effective. The
technological and human need is to fly beneath the radar of institutional
systems. The first attempt to do this was Web Services about 10 years ago. Web
Services enabled the connecting of the functionalities of different systems
together in ways which would work in most institutional environments. Unfortunately,
corporate managerialism consumed most of these ideas, using them to find new
ways of producing risk for individuals in the form of the big global social
network enterprises.
Now we have Web Sockets: the ability to create direct
communication protocols between web pages, again without interfering with any
of the high-level institutional security problems that usually plague
socket-based communication. This is really new because it affords much richer
real-time communications. Moreover, it enables those communications to be
served and managed not by central services, but by ordinary individuals:
setting-up a real-time communications server will become as easy as writing a
blog.
I find this interesting because it may provide a way in
which individuals can re-find ways of being together, and engage in convivial
activity. That’s important, because if the technology can genuinely support environments
for rich attachments, then the risk culture of managerialism is undermined: the
collective that looks after each other is more immune to individual risk
manipulation than the fragmented social wastelands we are currently producing.
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