In July 1995 the British government announced that the Employment Department was to be abolished and its functions redistributed throughout Whitehall. This article analyses the reasons for this abolition, presenting an argument that is intended to act as a stimulus for further research and policy debate. The article argues that the Employment Department's demise must be seen as part and parcel of a continued restructuring in state intervention from welfare to workfare. In a workfare state, social policy is subordinate to the needs of the market and the unemployed are forced to 'work off' benefits through compulsory participation on training schemes. This argument is developed through an historical analysis of British 'trainingfare' 1979-95,...
This report is part of an ESRC funded research which analyses the evolution of welfare reform in the...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
Employment policies have conventionally focused on the transition from welfare to work. However, man...
In July 1995 the British government announced that the Employment Department was to be abolished and...
During 2011, the UK Government introduced the Mandatory Work Activity scheme, which requires JSA cla...
In the paper we critically examine Jessop's regulationist theorisation of state restructuring, focus...
Workfare increases requirements on welfare claimants: a major shift in UK social welfare policy post...
The British ‘welfare state’ has been transformed. ‘Welfare’ has been replaced by a new ‘workfare’ re...
This article contends that workfare programmes pursued by various OECD countries since the mid-1990...
This article provides the background and subtext to a series of concerns recently raised on the degr...
In the latter half of the twentieth century, almost all core capitalist countries experienced the ph...
A new welfare-to-work regime is emerging in Britain, one that expects most working-age benefit claim...
At a time when more workless people in the UK are being mandated into highly conditional welfare to ...
Focussing on the UK, this paper considers how employment has been understood and identifies the poli...
This report is part of an ESRC funded research which analyses the evolution of welfare reform in the...
This report is part of an ESRC funded research which analyses the evolution of welfare reform in the...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
Employment policies have conventionally focused on the transition from welfare to work. However, man...
In July 1995 the British government announced that the Employment Department was to be abolished and...
During 2011, the UK Government introduced the Mandatory Work Activity scheme, which requires JSA cla...
In the paper we critically examine Jessop's regulationist theorisation of state restructuring, focus...
Workfare increases requirements on welfare claimants: a major shift in UK social welfare policy post...
The British ‘welfare state’ has been transformed. ‘Welfare’ has been replaced by a new ‘workfare’ re...
This article contends that workfare programmes pursued by various OECD countries since the mid-1990...
This article provides the background and subtext to a series of concerns recently raised on the degr...
In the latter half of the twentieth century, almost all core capitalist countries experienced the ph...
A new welfare-to-work regime is emerging in Britain, one that expects most working-age benefit claim...
At a time when more workless people in the UK are being mandated into highly conditional welfare to ...
Focussing on the UK, this paper considers how employment has been understood and identifies the poli...
This report is part of an ESRC funded research which analyses the evolution of welfare reform in the...
This report is part of an ESRC funded research which analyses the evolution of welfare reform in the...
Welfare to Work was one of the Labour Party's flagship policies during the run-up to the 1997 electi...
Employment policies have conventionally focused on the transition from welfare to work. However, man...