Benefits and employment services for unemployed people in Britain have always been based on work - related conditions. In recent decades, there has been a change in priority, away from viewing financial support from the state whilst unemployed as a respectable earned entitlement. Instead, policy makers have become mainly concerned with moving people ‘off benefits and into work’ (DWP 2010a; 2010b) by threatening sanctions (temporary withdrawal of essential benefit income) in order to ensure compliance with particular job search requirements
In order to fully understand the impact of the extension of conditionality in the UK to include peop...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
Increasing conditionality in access to welfare has been central to the reform of welfare states (Dea...
Since the 1990s, stricter conditions for the (long‐term) unemployed to receive benefits have been on...
Both the number of conditions attached to claiming UK unemployment benefits (Jobseeker’s Allowance [...
Conditionality has always been a feature of welfare benefit entitlements in the United Kingdom – how...
This article examines the under‐explored demand‐side of active labour market policies (ALMPs). Based...
This paper describes our new dataset on conditionality requirements for unem-ployment benefit claima...
Social policies can mitigate or worsen the adverse well-being impacts that are associated with unem...
This article contributes to an understanding of how conditionality applies across social security an...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
The empirical basis is a focus upon three substantive areas: IB claimants' routes on to IB; experien...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour’s ‘Third Way’ is no rights without responsibilities....
In order to fully understand the impact of the extension of conditionality in the UK to include peop...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
Increasing conditionality in access to welfare has been central to the reform of welfare states (Dea...
Since the 1990s, stricter conditions for the (long‐term) unemployed to receive benefits have been on...
Both the number of conditions attached to claiming UK unemployment benefits (Jobseeker’s Allowance [...
Conditionality has always been a feature of welfare benefit entitlements in the United Kingdom – how...
This article examines the under‐explored demand‐side of active labour market policies (ALMPs). Based...
This paper describes our new dataset on conditionality requirements for unem-ployment benefit claima...
Social policies can mitigate or worsen the adverse well-being impacts that are associated with unem...
This article contributes to an understanding of how conditionality applies across social security an...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
The empirical basis is a focus upon three substantive areas: IB claimants' routes on to IB; experien...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour’s ‘Third Way’ is no rights without responsibilities....
In order to fully understand the impact of the extension of conditionality in the UK to include peop...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
Increasing conditionality in access to welfare has been central to the reform of welfare states (Dea...