The household as a social formation is being assigned a renewed function in the provision of social welfare via neoliberal austerity politics. Government inaction regarding housing provision is forcing millions of young adults into “parental co-habitation”. In contrast to the dominant ideological view of the family as a school of liberty through the provision of welfare, this article argues that the dependence of millions of young adults on the parental household is degenerative both for the individual “recipient” and for the future democratic character of the polity. Mobilizing a Neo-Roman analysis of Liberty, I argue that housing policy is promoting the long-term creation of “slaves” as part of a wider strategy of oligarchic domination. T...
As debates about housing form an increasingly important arena of political controversy, much has bee...
This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideolog...
The reliance of welfare recipients on the state is classically demonised as a relation of dependency...
There is a substantial body of scholarship on the role of discourses in producing the neoliberal pol...
The May 2010 election of a Conservative-dominated UK Coalition Government unleashed an unprecedented...
This article considers the path of social policy and democracy in Australia and the latest set of we...
In Britain, especially in the 2010s, neoliberal reform involved an extension of legal coercion into ...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
This paper draws on the figurational sociology of Norbert Elias in understanding the current housing...
This article examines the development of the 'troubled families' narrative that emerged following th...
This article examines the development of the ‘troubled families’ narrative that emerged following th...
This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideolog...
This article focuses on core aspects of the political economy of New Labour and surveys the strategi...
This paper aims to provide a contribution to the debate about housing as asset based welfare begun i...
The rise of Neoliberalism since the late Twentieth century as the dominant global political and econ...
As debates about housing form an increasingly important arena of political controversy, much has bee...
This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideolog...
The reliance of welfare recipients on the state is classically demonised as a relation of dependency...
There is a substantial body of scholarship on the role of discourses in producing the neoliberal pol...
The May 2010 election of a Conservative-dominated UK Coalition Government unleashed an unprecedented...
This article considers the path of social policy and democracy in Australia and the latest set of we...
In Britain, especially in the 2010s, neoliberal reform involved an extension of legal coercion into ...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
This paper draws on the figurational sociology of Norbert Elias in understanding the current housing...
This article examines the development of the 'troubled families' narrative that emerged following th...
This article examines the development of the ‘troubled families’ narrative that emerged following th...
This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideolog...
This article focuses on core aspects of the political economy of New Labour and surveys the strategi...
This paper aims to provide a contribution to the debate about housing as asset based welfare begun i...
The rise of Neoliberalism since the late Twentieth century as the dominant global political and econ...
As debates about housing form an increasingly important arena of political controversy, much has bee...
This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideolog...
The reliance of welfare recipients on the state is classically demonised as a relation of dependency...