This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to increased poverty; exacerbated ill health; led some to engage in ‘survival crime’ or to disengage from the social security system. This support is predicated on the perceived need to discipline ‘undeserving’ groups; principally the feckless, those gaming the system and migrants. The authors argue that this reflects the success of a ‘two-nations’ hegemonic project that has sought to legitimise an ongoing phase of capitalist development characterised by the removal of social protections, widening inter-class inequalities and the implementation of punitive welfare reforms to submit the unemployed to insecure poverty labour. This article makes a s...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...
In this article, Andrew Dunn presents research which finds that many unemployed people prefer living...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
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...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Since the mid-1980s, out-of-work benefit receipt in the UK has been increasingly governed by a ‘work...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
This submission presents key findings to date from a critical examination of unemployment benefit sa...
Economic sanctions have gained more political legitimacy and are being more widely used as a tool to...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...
In this article, Andrew Dunn presents research which finds that many unemployed people prefer living...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
This article assesses the Conservative-led Coalition Government’s (2010–2015) record on benefit sanc...
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...
Unemployed people in Britain who are in receipt of government welfare benefits can have these benefi...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
The dominant view among British policy-makers is that benefit sanctions for the unemployed who are c...
Since the mid-1980s, out-of-work benefit receipt in the UK has been increasingly governed by a ‘work...
Since the election of the Coalition in 2010, there has been a massive campaign of sanctions – puniti...
This submission presents key findings to date from a critical examination of unemployment benefit sa...
Economic sanctions have gained more political legitimacy and are being more widely used as a tool to...
In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the hist...
The benefit sanction is a dominant activation policy in Britain’s ‘welfare-to-work’ regime. While po...
In this article, Andrew Dunn presents research which finds that many unemployed people prefer living...