Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on benefit conditions or sanctions (previously called disqualifications). The relevant academic literature has been correspondingly thin. But over the past three decades there has been a dramatic shift to increased conditionality in social security, accompanied by increased harshness in the penalties. This has started to spawn a substantial new literature. This review article considers three significant recent publications. Although written from different perspectives, they all conclude that the current UK sanctions system cannot be justified. The review article argues that more attention needs to be paid to the flaws in the economic case for c...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour's "Third Way" is no rights without responsibilities....
This article contributes to an understanding of how conditionality applies across social security an...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
The application of formal conditionality to address ‘dependence’ on social security has ...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour’s ‘Third Way’ is no rights without responsibilities....
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour's "Third Way" is no rights without responsibilities....
This article contributes to an understanding of how conditionality applies across social security an...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
The application of formal conditionality to address ‘dependence’ on social security has ...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour’s ‘Third Way’ is no rights without responsibilities....
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
A widely recognised central tenet of New Labour's "Third Way" is no rights without responsibilities....
This article contributes to an understanding of how conditionality applies across social security an...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...