Marginalised voices in the inclusive recruitment discourse: a dilemma of inclusion/exclusion in the (Swedish) police

Authors

  • Malin Wieslander Linköping University, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3384/rela.2000-7426.rela9106

Keywords:

Diversity, intersectionality, minority background, police, resistance recruitment

Abstract

Recruitment for diversity is part of a range of proactive strategies for overcoming occupational stereotyping in a number of professions, as well as addressing a history of discrimination against women and minority groups. One such campaign launched by the Swedish police involves ‘inclusive recruitment’. By analysing the discourse of inclusive recruitment and its subject positions in police student talk, this article shows how borders between people who are assigned different social categories are constructed, challenged and reinforced. Positive intentions in agendas towards diversity are problematised when minorities are ascribed as admitted on quotation, which places them in a ubordinate and ‘risky position’ within an occupation and on less legitimate premises. A dilemma emerges between a call to represent minority groups and the risk of categorising them as ‘others’. In particular, voices of resistance from ethnic minority police women show how practices of exclusion could jeopardise efforts to achieve inclusion.

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Published

2018-04-06

How to Cite

Wieslander, M. (2018). Marginalised voices in the inclusive recruitment discourse: a dilemma of inclusion/exclusion in the (Swedish) police. European Journal for Research on the Education and Learning of Adults, 9(1), 61–77. https://doi.org/10.3384/rela.2000-7426.rela9106