The Development of Canadian Nursing: Professionalization and Proletarianization
- 1 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 18 (3) , 437-456
- https://doi.org/10.2190/1bdv-p7fn-9nwf-vkvr
Abstract
In this article, the development of nursing in Canada is described in terms of three major time periods: the emergence of lay nursing, including organization and registration, 1870–1930; the move to the hospital, 1930–1950; and unionization and the routinization of health care, 1950 to the present. This development is viewed in the light of the orienting concepts of professionalization, proletarianization, and medical dominance (and gender analysis). This historical trajectory of nursing shows an increasing occupational autonomy but continuing struggles over control of the labor process. Nursing is now using theory, organizational changes in health care, and credentialism to help make nursing “separate from but equal to” medicine and to gain control over the day-to-day work of the nurse. Nursing can thus be viewed as undergoing processes of both professionalization and proletarianization. As nursing seeks to control the labor process, its occupational conflicts are joined to the class struggle of white-collar workers in general. Analysis of nursing indicates the problems involved in sorting out the meaning of concepts that are relevant to occupational or class analysis but which focus on the same empirical phenomenon.Keywords
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