ABSTRACT

The importance and influence of professions in public life has grown increasingly over the twentieth century but the question of whether they subordinate their own self-interests to the public interest has yet to be adequately researched within a major sociological perspective. In Professions and the Public Interest Mike Saks develops a theoretical and methodological framework for assessing professional groups in Western society. The empirical applicability of this framework is demonstrated with particular reference to a novel case study of the response of the medical profession to acupuncture in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Professions and the Public Interest will be of great interest to all lecturers and students of social policy, sociology, and medical sociology as well as to professional groups and their members.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part |91 pages

Sociology, professions and the public interest

chapter |29 pages

The role of professions

Power, interests and causality

part |166 pages

An empirical application: the response of the medical profession to acupuncture in Great Britain

chapter |36 pages

Alternative medicine

The case of acupuncture

chapter |44 pages

Acupuncture and British medicine

The influence of professional power and interests

chapter |38 pages

The medical reception of acupuncture in Britain

Professional ideologies and the public interest