The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While policymakers believe in their necessity to correct behaviour, research shows benefit sanctions cause additional harm to Britain’s marginalised groups. Drawing upon a small-scale qualitative study, this article first navigates new territory, mapping the ways stigma emerges from the state – channelled through the benefit sanction – and manifests in the lives of sanctioned claimants. Acknowledging wider evidence, the sanction is then argued to have failed as a correctional device. Rather, taking into account Britain’s current politico-economic climate, the sanction appears as a weapon used to incite negative emotion in an attempt to police the bou...
This paper, which accompanies the National Audit Office report on benefit sanctions in the UK, provi...
Internationally, policymakers assume that sanctioning claimants of unemployment benefits will engend...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
This paper, which accompanies the National Audit Office report on benefit sanctions in the UK, provi...
Internationally, policymakers assume that sanctioning claimants of unemployment benefits will engend...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
This paper, which accompanies the National Audit Office report on benefit sanctions in the UK, provi...
Internationally, policymakers assume that sanctioning claimants of unemployment benefits will engend...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...