The professionalization of veterinary medicine in Britain has been little studied by social scientists, although as a classic instance of an occupation that has achieved exclusionary social closure it merits examination from a neo-Weberian perspective. Therefore, this paper explores how it has attained this position through state action in an historical and contemporary context using neo-Weberianism as a theoretical lens. In charting the different stages and forms of professional regulation in veterinary medicine, group self-interest is identified as a central driver, following the neo-Weberian idiom. However, contrary to the position adopted by some neo-Weberians, the professionalization process is seen as being more complex than simply be...
Over the past decade, veterinarians have been accused of being largely responsible for the overuse o...
Despite extensive research and discussion around the notion of medical professionalism, veterinary p...
The veterinary profession has been relatively understudied in social science, though recent work has...
The sociology of professions literature would predict that the contemporary state would not allow gr...
This paper outlines a neo-Weberian approach to state-sponsored social closure in professional format...
This study examines the development of the veterinary profession from the theoretical perspective of...
This paper analyses how the changing governance of animal health has impacted upon veterinary expert...
Reviewing veterinary professionalization across six Anglo-American colonial settler societies draws ...
This paper argues the case for professional bodies to lose their right to self-regulate wholly withi...
The State and the veterinary profession. How public policies contribute to the regulation of profess...
This article presents a review of the social science literature on the veterinary profession. It hig...
The article begins by highlighting the recent more critical approach to professions in the Anglo-Ame...
In the second of a series of articles reflecting on issues raised in the 2009 Lowe report on veterin...
This thesis investigates the regulation of the veterinary profession in the UK. In the UK this profe...
Context: VET is faced with profound challenges in the post-COVID era: fundamental questions about th...
Over the past decade, veterinarians have been accused of being largely responsible for the overuse o...
Despite extensive research and discussion around the notion of medical professionalism, veterinary p...
The veterinary profession has been relatively understudied in social science, though recent work has...
The sociology of professions literature would predict that the contemporary state would not allow gr...
This paper outlines a neo-Weberian approach to state-sponsored social closure in professional format...
This study examines the development of the veterinary profession from the theoretical perspective of...
This paper analyses how the changing governance of animal health has impacted upon veterinary expert...
Reviewing veterinary professionalization across six Anglo-American colonial settler societies draws ...
This paper argues the case for professional bodies to lose their right to self-regulate wholly withi...
The State and the veterinary profession. How public policies contribute to the regulation of profess...
This article presents a review of the social science literature on the veterinary profession. It hig...
The article begins by highlighting the recent more critical approach to professions in the Anglo-Ame...
In the second of a series of articles reflecting on issues raised in the 2009 Lowe report on veterin...
This thesis investigates the regulation of the veterinary profession in the UK. In the UK this profe...
Context: VET is faced with profound challenges in the post-COVID era: fundamental questions about th...
Over the past decade, veterinarians have been accused of being largely responsible for the overuse o...
Despite extensive research and discussion around the notion of medical professionalism, veterinary p...
The veterinary profession has been relatively understudied in social science, though recent work has...