This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated through findings of the Individual Budgets (IB) evaluation. The evaluation tested the impact of IBs as a mechanism to increase choice of access to and commissioning of social care services around the individual through a randomised trial and explored the experiences and perspectives of key groups through a large set of interviews. The article presents a re-examination of these interview data, using three ‘antagonisms of choice’ proposed in the literature – choice and power relations, choice and equity, and choice and the public nature of decisions – as organising themes. The randomised trial found that IB holders perceived they had more contr...
Choice has re-emerged as a key theme in UK public policy. Drawing on a major empirical study of choi...
Governments in several countries have sought to increase choice in public services. Proponents claim...
The paper analyses the consequences of alternative prioritisation of outcomes, and so of stakeholder...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
In common with many advanced welfare states, England has increasingly relied on consumerist principl...
Choice and competition policies in public services are popular reform strategies in many European co...
Choice and competition have been phased into many public health systems with the aim of achieving va...
Conceptualizing and measuring choice is problematic both in theory and in practice. Measuring by cou...
Introducing choice and competition in public services was supposed to put citizens in the “driver’s ...
Increasing numbers of developed welfare states now operate cash-for-care schemes in which service us...
The Department of Health's Green Paper, Independence, Well‐being and Choice (2005) is subtitled ‘our...
Choice by service users has been promoted in social policy across many developed welfare states, oft...
Increasing numbers of developed welfare states now operate cash-for-care schemes in which service us...
Background: The article explores the implications of personal budgets within English social care ser...
Choice has re-emerged as a key theme in UK public policy. Drawing on a major empirical study of choi...
Governments in several countries have sought to increase choice in public services. Proponents claim...
The paper analyses the consequences of alternative prioritisation of outcomes, and so of stakeholder...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
This article aims to explore the concept of choice in public service policy in England, illustrated ...
In common with many advanced welfare states, England has increasingly relied on consumerist principl...
Choice and competition policies in public services are popular reform strategies in many European co...
Choice and competition have been phased into many public health systems with the aim of achieving va...
Conceptualizing and measuring choice is problematic both in theory and in practice. Measuring by cou...
Introducing choice and competition in public services was supposed to put citizens in the “driver’s ...
Increasing numbers of developed welfare states now operate cash-for-care schemes in which service us...
The Department of Health's Green Paper, Independence, Well‐being and Choice (2005) is subtitled ‘our...
Choice by service users has been promoted in social policy across many developed welfare states, oft...
Increasing numbers of developed welfare states now operate cash-for-care schemes in which service us...
Background: The article explores the implications of personal budgets within English social care ser...
Choice has re-emerged as a key theme in UK public policy. Drawing on a major empirical study of choi...
Governments in several countries have sought to increase choice in public services. Proponents claim...
The paper analyses the consequences of alternative prioritisation of outcomes, and so of stakeholder...