“…As a result, governments around the globe are struggling with the conceptual and practical issues involved in designing regulatory systems that maintain governmental control over these services, on the one hand, while facilitating innovation and professional discretion, on the other (Kröger, ). Although there is already considerable scholarly work on the rise of the regulatory state, work on the regulation of social welfare services remains limited both in the literature on social work and social welfare (e.g., Furness, ; Goodship, Jacks, Gummerson, Lathlean, & Cope, ; Munro, ) and in the literature on regulatory governance (e.g., Braithwaite, Makkai, & Braithwaite, ; Gormley, ; Lahat & Talit, ). Moreover, the existing literature rarely addresses the ways the regulatory mission is perceived and actually practiced at the street level, nor does it consider the professional dilemmas involved in regulating social welfare services (Brady, ; Brodkin, ).…”