In the UK, a dominant narrative operates to stereotype and stigmatise out-of-work benefit claimants as inactive welfare dependents who require activation if they are to enter paid employment and behave responsibly. Drawing upon a small-scale qualitative longitudinal study into lived experiences of welfare reform, this paper explores how out-of-work claimants respond to this dominant narrative. The paper illustrates the reach of benefits stigma, and the strategies adopted by claimants to manage such stigma: most notably via an 'othering' of those deemed less deserving. It is argued that this 'othering' is best understood as an admittedly defensive form of citizenship engagement
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Behavioural explanations of poverty and disadvantage have figured heav...
Since the mid-1980s, out-of-work benefit receipt in the UK has been increasingly governed by a ‘work...
This article has been published in a revised form in Social Policy and Society https://doi.org/10.10...
In the UK, a dominant narrative operates to stereotype and stigmatise out-of-work benefit claimants ...
During the course of my research I interviewed a number of young people who have made a conscio...
This thesis reports on a qualitative longitudinal study into the lived experiences of welfare reform...
The use of welfare support by EU migrants has dominated media coverage and political debates about E...
Ruth Patrick considers the extent to which there is a (mis)match between government and media rhetor...
The accounting processes of categorisation and classification are inherent in modern-day welfare sys...
Since 2008 political and media attention has focused on the allegedly problematic behaviour of drug ...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
People receiving welfare payments are stigmatized. However, previous studies of welfare recipient st...
The recent retheorisation of stigma (Tyler, 2020) has transformed understandings of the concept from...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Drawing on interviews with welfare claimants living in Essex, UK, this article examines the material...
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Behavioural explanations of poverty and disadvantage have figured heav...
Since the mid-1980s, out-of-work benefit receipt in the UK has been increasingly governed by a ‘work...
This article has been published in a revised form in Social Policy and Society https://doi.org/10.10...
In the UK, a dominant narrative operates to stereotype and stigmatise out-of-work benefit claimants ...
During the course of my research I interviewed a number of young people who have made a conscio...
This thesis reports on a qualitative longitudinal study into the lived experiences of welfare reform...
The use of welfare support by EU migrants has dominated media coverage and political debates about E...
Ruth Patrick considers the extent to which there is a (mis)match between government and media rhetor...
The accounting processes of categorisation and classification are inherent in modern-day welfare sys...
Since 2008 political and media attention has focused on the allegedly problematic behaviour of drug ...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
People receiving welfare payments are stigmatized. However, previous studies of welfare recipient st...
The recent retheorisation of stigma (Tyler, 2020) has transformed understandings of the concept from...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Drawing on interviews with welfare claimants living in Essex, UK, this article examines the material...
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Behavioural explanations of poverty and disadvantage have figured heav...
Since the mid-1980s, out-of-work benefit receipt in the UK has been increasingly governed by a ‘work...
This article has been published in a revised form in Social Policy and Society https://doi.org/10.10...