Britain’s 2015 summer budget introduced a policy extending the use of loans in its social security system. From April 2018 support for mortgage interest will be loaned, rather than granted. Its repayment is to be via a charging order on the homes of benefit recipients and/or from wages when they (re-)enter work. This development is examined in relationship to the use of loans in British social assistance provision. The paper argues that it is consistent with the philosophical underpinnings of loaning social assistance, but it also involves new developments with regard to charging interest and the recovery of the loans
Summary. It is argued that social housing in the UK curren tly faces affordability and invest-ment p...
This chapter focuses upon relationships between social assistance and crime in the UK. It examines w...
This article examines the dynamics of credit and debt in low income households, drawing on an action...
In the first of two articles, Stewart Smyth outlines the recent history of policy changes towards so...
This paper provides an analysis of the financialisation of the British welfare state. In a continuat...
This thesis examines the interaction between housing policy and the social security benefits that su...
Housing has been unjustifiably neglected in comparative welfare state research. The banking crisis o...
This article investigates the question to what extent Germany fits into the recent trend of credit-b...
The British Housing Benefit system has become one of the central pillars of housing policy as well a...
<p>One potential way to support the development of new affordable housing in Scotland, either ...
There has been considerable innovation in social policy in many developed countries since the mid-19...
This article reviews Lee and Carlisle’s (2023) work that addresses how two local government authorit...
During the 1990s, amidst spiraling house prices and accessible credit, national governments in the N...
The challenge of funding the SDG’s has led to considerable interest in ‘innovative financing’. This ...
Supported housing is a particular complex sub-section of the housing sector, and generally refers to...
Summary. It is argued that social housing in the UK curren tly faces affordability and invest-ment p...
This chapter focuses upon relationships between social assistance and crime in the UK. It examines w...
This article examines the dynamics of credit and debt in low income households, drawing on an action...
In the first of two articles, Stewart Smyth outlines the recent history of policy changes towards so...
This paper provides an analysis of the financialisation of the British welfare state. In a continuat...
This thesis examines the interaction between housing policy and the social security benefits that su...
Housing has been unjustifiably neglected in comparative welfare state research. The banking crisis o...
This article investigates the question to what extent Germany fits into the recent trend of credit-b...
The British Housing Benefit system has become one of the central pillars of housing policy as well a...
<p>One potential way to support the development of new affordable housing in Scotland, either ...
There has been considerable innovation in social policy in many developed countries since the mid-19...
This article reviews Lee and Carlisle’s (2023) work that addresses how two local government authorit...
During the 1990s, amidst spiraling house prices and accessible credit, national governments in the N...
The challenge of funding the SDG’s has led to considerable interest in ‘innovative financing’. This ...
Supported housing is a particular complex sub-section of the housing sector, and generally refers to...
Summary. It is argued that social housing in the UK curren tly faces affordability and invest-ment p...
This chapter focuses upon relationships between social assistance and crime in the UK. It examines w...
This article examines the dynamics of credit and debt in low income households, drawing on an action...