A study of the work experiences of a group of low-skilled workers over five years. Concern has been growing about the extent to which paid work is an effective route out of poverty and the extent of churning between work and benefits that can result in recurrent poverty. Using both interview and survey data, this report examines work pathways, experiences of retention and progression, and feelings of financial strain among a group of lone parents and former long-term unemployed people who have entered work. The report covers: • people’s perceptions of poverty and financial strain and how this relates to their movements in and out of work; • people’s trajectories in work and the factors facilitating or constraining work retention; • the ...
‘Work-life balance’ generally refers to how people may combine paid employment with family responsib...
For many years now government welfare policy has focused on getting lower-skilled people into work, ...
New research by Alex Hurrell and colleagues at the Resolution Foundation examines the persistence of...
Government policy emphasises paid work as the best route out of poverty and skills policy as part of...
In-work poverty describes the experiences of households where at least one person is in work and the...
This article argues for the need to reconsider the changing nature of in-work poverty (IWP). In doin...
Contexts of poverty seem to magnify vulnerabilities in mothers, especially women who have few resour...
YesSet in the context of the recent unprecedented upsurge of in-work poverty (IWP) in the UK – which...
There is growing concern about the problem of in-work poverty in the UK. Despite this, the literatur...
Structural changes in the labour markets of developed economies, and changes in their institutional ...
How and why do people become trapped in a long-term cycle of low-paid jobs and unemployment? Litt...
This CASEbrief reports on the findings of recent research examining the employment pathways followed...
The objective of this article is to distinguish between different types of working poverty, on the b...
This exploratory research focused on the structural context of working poverty, thereby transcending...
As part of the ESRC Knowledge Exchange project “Identifying sustainable pathways out of in-work pove...
‘Work-life balance’ generally refers to how people may combine paid employment with family responsib...
For many years now government welfare policy has focused on getting lower-skilled people into work, ...
New research by Alex Hurrell and colleagues at the Resolution Foundation examines the persistence of...
Government policy emphasises paid work as the best route out of poverty and skills policy as part of...
In-work poverty describes the experiences of households where at least one person is in work and the...
This article argues for the need to reconsider the changing nature of in-work poverty (IWP). In doin...
Contexts of poverty seem to magnify vulnerabilities in mothers, especially women who have few resour...
YesSet in the context of the recent unprecedented upsurge of in-work poverty (IWP) in the UK – which...
There is growing concern about the problem of in-work poverty in the UK. Despite this, the literatur...
Structural changes in the labour markets of developed economies, and changes in their institutional ...
How and why do people become trapped in a long-term cycle of low-paid jobs and unemployment? Litt...
This CASEbrief reports on the findings of recent research examining the employment pathways followed...
The objective of this article is to distinguish between different types of working poverty, on the b...
This exploratory research focused on the structural context of working poverty, thereby transcending...
As part of the ESRC Knowledge Exchange project “Identifying sustainable pathways out of in-work pove...
‘Work-life balance’ generally refers to how people may combine paid employment with family responsib...
For many years now government welfare policy has focused on getting lower-skilled people into work, ...
New research by Alex Hurrell and colleagues at the Resolution Foundation examines the persistence of...