Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining trends over time in perceptions of child necessities, rates of child poverty and parental behaviours. Results indicate high levels of stability between 1999 and 2012 in public perceptions of child necessities, stable or increasing rates of child poverty and similarities in the profile of child poverty vulnerability. In both 1999 and 2012, findings show that the majority of parents prioritise children's needs, posing a challenge for coalition rhetoric, and suggesting that a focus on structural rather than individual causes of poverty may be needed
According to Family Expenditure Survey (FES) data, child poverty (with a poverty line defined at hal...
When Britain’s Coalition government took office in May 2010, it pledged to continue the previous Lab...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
The context for the thesis is the Government's ambitious target to eradicate child poverty by 2020 w...
Poverty is a lifestyle choice, according to government rhetoric. And although research suggests othe...
This paper provides an analysis of questions on attitudes to necessities for the child items and act...
In 2016 the UK’s Conservative Government radically changed the official approach to child poverty me...
This note is designed to draw attention to how the pattern of child poverty has changed since the La...
Current political rhetoric and some media commentaries suggest there is a yawning gap of understandi...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
According to Family Expenditure Survey (FES) data, child poverty (with a poverty line defined at hal...
When Britain’s Coalition government took office in May 2010, it pledged to continue the previous Lab...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
Child poverty remains high on the UK political agenda. This paper informs these debates by examining...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
There is cross-party agreement on the urgency of addressing child poverty in the UK, but less consen...
The context for the thesis is the Government's ambitious target to eradicate child poverty by 2020 w...
Poverty is a lifestyle choice, according to government rhetoric. And although research suggests othe...
This paper provides an analysis of questions on attitudes to necessities for the child items and act...
In 2016 the UK’s Conservative Government radically changed the official approach to child poverty me...
This note is designed to draw attention to how the pattern of child poverty has changed since the La...
Current political rhetoric and some media commentaries suggest there is a yawning gap of understandi...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
According to Family Expenditure Survey (FES) data, child poverty (with a poverty line defined at hal...
When Britain’s Coalition government took office in May 2010, it pledged to continue the previous Lab...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...