Critiquing these interventions the contributors to this volume show how diverse groups of people - immigrants families considered 'at risk' by social services pregnant women young girls - are variously the objects of context-specific normalization processes and practices that make any resistance to such interventions difficult if not impossible. What people 'normally do' cloaks that ' normal doing' with a fog of invisibilization that suffocates any form of protest. Normalization thus takes on specific forms of repression in particular circumstances for instance through the ethnocentric imposition of norms of behaviour on migrants where that ethnocentricity is neither made evident nor acknowledged. This system of normalization also operates in schools resulting in the reproduction of inequalities and discrimination from an early age. In such normalization processes ' the normal' or ' the usual' ; becomes a means for reinterpreting structural inequalities in terms of individual choice and for displacing the responsibilities for change onto those positioned as outsiders. The individual chapters highlight how the operations of normalizing processes work to obscure their functioning thus making any critique of both the underlying assumptions and their operationalization almost impossible.
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