This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseekers Allowance claimants more than doubled before falling back to their original level, and Employment and Support Allowance sanctions also rose and fell markedly. It compares the scale and severity of this sanctions drive with historical experience, showing that on reasonable criteria it was the harshest regime ever applied since the Poor Law was superseded by National Insurance. It looks at immediate explanations before moving on to describe how a punitive sanctions system has developed over the last 30 years and considering the underlying reasons for the transformation of what for decades was a system of unemployment support run on insurance...
This submission argues that the current enthusiasm for sanctions arises from an overemphasis on supp...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
This submission presents key findings to date from a critical examination of unemployment benefit sa...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
This paper, which accompanies the National Audit Office report on benefit sanctions in the UK, provi...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
This article describes the large rise since 2005 in the number of Jobseeker's Allowance claimants be...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
In Germany, imposition of benefit cuts for non-compliant welfare recipients depends on the policy of...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
Benefit sanctions imposed on non-compliant welfare recipients are a new element in the German welfar...
This submission argues that the current enthusiasm for sanctions arises from an overemphasis on supp...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...
This presentation describes the great benefit sanctions drive of 2010-16, when sanctions on Jobseeke...
This submission presents key findings to date from a critical examination of unemployment benefit sa...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
This paper, which accompanies the National Audit Office report on benefit sanctions in the UK, provi...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
This article describes the large rise since 2005 in the number of Jobseeker's Allowance claimants be...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
In Germany, imposition of benefit cuts for non-compliant welfare recipients depends on the policy of...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
Benefit sanctions imposed on non-compliant welfare recipients are a new element in the German welfar...
This submission argues that the current enthusiasm for sanctions arises from an overemphasis on supp...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...