In this article I explore how the figure of debt illuminates the racial politics of welfare in neoliberal Britain. I begin by giving a reading of the simultaneous unfolding of post-war race politics and the Beveridgean welfare state, and then turn to consider the interpellative appeal of neoliberal debt to minoritiSed subjects who have, in certain respects, been de facto excluded from prevailing models of welfare citizenship. In particular, this article considers the ways in which household debt might, even as it increases social inequality, simultaneously produce ideas about equality and futurity, as well as gesture towards the possibility of post-national forms of identity and belonging. If we are to challenge the lowest-common-denominato...
The Article argues that at the core of the American neoliberal policy regime, of which child welfare...
Ongoing processes of ‘austerity localism’, including the state’s withdrawal from local communities, ...
This article explores two influential strands of thinking about the welfare state, Blue Labour and P...
This article addresses the colonial and racial origins of the welfare state with a particular emphas...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article addresses the c...
In this article, I examine normative assumptions about cash transfers as public goods and the lived ...
The Color of Creditworthiness: Debt, Race, and Democracy in the 21st Century addresses the historica...
The expansion of cash benefits to low-paid workers has been one of the most significant development...
This article considers the path of social policy and democracy in Australia and the latest set of we...
The incendiary dynamic between race and welfare in the United States is well-known. An under explore...
AbstractRecent extensive reforms to the welfare system and concurrent reduction in the provision of ...
The articles in this volume reflect upon a very specific moment in the social architecture of Britis...
This paper provides an analysis of the financialisation of the British welfare state. In a continuat...
We situate racialized migrant mothers as political actors in the landscape of austerity in England a...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
The Article argues that at the core of the American neoliberal policy regime, of which child welfare...
Ongoing processes of ‘austerity localism’, including the state’s withdrawal from local communities, ...
This article explores two influential strands of thinking about the welfare state, Blue Labour and P...
This article addresses the colonial and racial origins of the welfare state with a particular emphas...
© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article addresses the c...
In this article, I examine normative assumptions about cash transfers as public goods and the lived ...
The Color of Creditworthiness: Debt, Race, and Democracy in the 21st Century addresses the historica...
The expansion of cash benefits to low-paid workers has been one of the most significant development...
This article considers the path of social policy and democracy in Australia and the latest set of we...
The incendiary dynamic between race and welfare in the United States is well-known. An under explore...
AbstractRecent extensive reforms to the welfare system and concurrent reduction in the provision of ...
The articles in this volume reflect upon a very specific moment in the social architecture of Britis...
This paper provides an analysis of the financialisation of the British welfare state. In a continuat...
We situate racialized migrant mothers as political actors in the landscape of austerity in England a...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
The Article argues that at the core of the American neoliberal policy regime, of which child welfare...
Ongoing processes of ‘austerity localism’, including the state’s withdrawal from local communities, ...
This article explores two influential strands of thinking about the welfare state, Blue Labour and P...