This paper (re)conceptualizes the fundamental concerns of social work in la
te-modernity as 'life politics'. Drawing on theories of reflexive modernity
and risk society, the emergence of life politics is placed in the context
of processes of 'individualization', a transformation of intimacy, and a ne
w kind of reflexivity and concern with risk which have moved to the centre
of how both institutions and selfhood are constituted today. The paper aims
to move understandings of the radical potential of social work beyond a on
e-dimensional view of power and risk which arises from an over-structural f
ocus on 'emancipatory politics'. At the heart of late-modern life politics,
it is argued, is a new relationship between the personal and the political
, expertise and lay people, in which social work increasingly takes the for
m of being a methodology of 'life planning' for late-modern citizens. The p
aper aims to advance forms of practice which take the life political domain
, emotionality and the depth of social relations as their primary focus, th
us enhancing the capacities of (vulnerable) clients to practise effective l
ife-planning, find healing and gain mastery over their lives.