There is concern that the ‘localism’ promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower the already powerful. This paper uses Bourdieu’s theory of practice to theorise middle-class public service use. Building on a previous evidence review (Matthews and Hastings, 2013) it considers whether the habitus of the middle-classes enables them to gain disproportionate benefit from public services. Service provision is understood as a ‘field’ marked by a competitive struggle between social agents who embody class-based power asymmetries. It finds that engagement with the state is a classed practice producing benefits to those already empowered and that localism may exacerbate inequalities
David Cameron’s Big Society idea is ambitious but its implications are far from straightforward. Dav...
One of the core aims of the government’s big society programme is to devolve power and the provision...
In recent years British Conservatism has sought to elaborate its own understanding of social justice...
There is concern that the ‘localism’ promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower th...
here is concern that the 'localism' promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower the...
here is concern that the 'localism' promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower the...
This paper summarises for a policy and practice audience the results of a review of the research evi...
This paper summarises for a policy and practice audience the results of a review of the research evi...
In comparing the neo-liberal imperative of the 1980s with the present government's 'Big Society' pro...
Since the late 1960s social policy scholarship has been concerned with the distribution of the resou...
Since the late 1960s social policy scholarship has been concerned with the distribution of the resou...
There is concern that the middle classes enjoy advantages over less affluent social groups in relati...
There is concern that the middle classes enjoy advantages over less affluent social groups in relati...
As reports emerge of a crisis meeting between big society architects Steve Hilton and Philip Blond, ...
‘Big Society’ has been a flagship policy of the UK Coalition Government, centred around ideas of loc...
David Cameron’s Big Society idea is ambitious but its implications are far from straightforward. Dav...
One of the core aims of the government’s big society programme is to devolve power and the provision...
In recent years British Conservatism has sought to elaborate its own understanding of social justice...
There is concern that the ‘localism’ promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower th...
here is concern that the 'localism' promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower the...
here is concern that the 'localism' promoted by the UK Coalition Government will further empower the...
This paper summarises for a policy and practice audience the results of a review of the research evi...
This paper summarises for a policy and practice audience the results of a review of the research evi...
In comparing the neo-liberal imperative of the 1980s with the present government's 'Big Society' pro...
Since the late 1960s social policy scholarship has been concerned with the distribution of the resou...
Since the late 1960s social policy scholarship has been concerned with the distribution of the resou...
There is concern that the middle classes enjoy advantages over less affluent social groups in relati...
There is concern that the middle classes enjoy advantages over less affluent social groups in relati...
As reports emerge of a crisis meeting between big society architects Steve Hilton and Philip Blond, ...
‘Big Society’ has been a flagship policy of the UK Coalition Government, centred around ideas of loc...
David Cameron’s Big Society idea is ambitious but its implications are far from straightforward. Dav...
One of the core aims of the government’s big society programme is to devolve power and the provision...
In recent years British Conservatism has sought to elaborate its own understanding of social justice...