TY - JOUR
T1 - Prompting professional prerogatives
T2 - New insights to reopen an old debate about nursing
AU - Ayala, Ricardo A.
AU - Vanderstraeten, Raf
AU - Bracke, Piet
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.
PY - 2014/12/1
Y1 - 2014/12/1
N2 - A profession is defined by neither a set of structural qualities nor a description idiosyncratic to a single culture. Rather, a profession detects problems in an area of work, intellectualizes that work, and offers solutions, developing a logic of competition with coexisting occupations. The best that structural explanations can offer to nursing is rigid, unmovable definitions such as "a semi-profession," whereas the ecological theory of the professions regards the continuous interplay among occupations cohabiting in an interacting system as the fundamental process of gaining or losing professional status. In this theoretically driven article we draw upon the notion of "social ecology of nursing" as a vector of development, arguing that nursing's professional status lies in its ability to adapt to "landscape" transformations and to protect its jurisdiction from competitors, equating fully established professions. In discussing the application of this theory, we invite readers to reopen a debate about the professional nature of nursing, considering cross-national versions of nursing for more comprehensive definitions of the profession.
AB - A profession is defined by neither a set of structural qualities nor a description idiosyncratic to a single culture. Rather, a profession detects problems in an area of work, intellectualizes that work, and offers solutions, developing a logic of competition with coexisting occupations. The best that structural explanations can offer to nursing is rigid, unmovable definitions such as "a semi-profession," whereas the ecological theory of the professions regards the continuous interplay among occupations cohabiting in an interacting system as the fundamental process of gaining or losing professional status. In this theoretically driven article we draw upon the notion of "social ecology of nursing" as a vector of development, arguing that nursing's professional status lies in its ability to adapt to "landscape" transformations and to protect its jurisdiction from competitors, equating fully established professions. In discussing the application of this theory, we invite readers to reopen a debate about the professional nature of nursing, considering cross-national versions of nursing for more comprehensive definitions of the profession.
KW - Nursing
KW - Professional status
KW - Social theory
KW - Systemic theory of the professions
KW - Theoretical framework
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84917671847&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/nhs.12129
DO - 10.1111/nhs.12129
M3 - Article
C2 - 24943874
AN - SCOPUS:84917671847
SN - 1441-0745
VL - 16
SP - 506
EP - 513
JO - Nursing and Health Sciences
JF - Nursing and Health Sciences
IS - 4
ER -