Existing research indicates an association between the introduction of Universal Credit in the UK and increased financial hardship among claimants. This policy change embodies key changes in welfare policy and ideology taking place across Europe and worldwide. This study investigates the association between housing insecurity and claiming Universal Credit in comparison to Housing Benefit and Jobseeker’s Allowance. To examine changes in housing insecurity trajectories before and after the introduction of Universal Credit, we apply a difference-in-differences fixed effects logistic regression research design to Understanding Society data (2009–2020) on benefit claimants in England. We compare how Universal Credit claimants’ likelihood of hous...
Many factors have contributed to the development of credit markets, easing access of households to c...
Introduction The UK social security system is being transformed by the implementation of Universal C...
Housing has been unjustifiably neglected in comparative welfare state research. The banking crisis o...
Universal Credit (UC) has been rolling out since 2013 to radically alter the UK welfare system. Seve...
Housing allowances within the UK’s welfare system help protect low-income households from eviction. ...
Background: The UK social security system is undergoing transformative changes with the introduction...
We evaluate the unintended effects of Universal Credit (UC), a monumental welfare reform that has in...
BACKGROUND:Universal Credit, a welfare benefit reform in the UK, began to replace six existing benef...
This thesis investigates the policy implementation of Universal Credit (UC), and how welfare behavio...
Universal Credit is a major change in the UK’s social security system which will affect around eight...
Objectives: to understand the impact of the roll out of Universal Credit (UC) from the perspectives ...
Policymakers seeking to reform social security systems have frequently confronted a central tension:...
In recent years, a number of welfare reforms have been introduced in the UK by Conservative-led gove...
Introduced in the United Kingdom in 2012, Universal Credit (UC) is a welfare benefit that replaces s...
In this paper we explore whether the recent rise in food bank usage in the UK has been induced by th...
Many factors have contributed to the development of credit markets, easing access of households to c...
Introduction The UK social security system is being transformed by the implementation of Universal C...
Housing has been unjustifiably neglected in comparative welfare state research. The banking crisis o...
Universal Credit (UC) has been rolling out since 2013 to radically alter the UK welfare system. Seve...
Housing allowances within the UK’s welfare system help protect low-income households from eviction. ...
Background: The UK social security system is undergoing transformative changes with the introduction...
We evaluate the unintended effects of Universal Credit (UC), a monumental welfare reform that has in...
BACKGROUND:Universal Credit, a welfare benefit reform in the UK, began to replace six existing benef...
This thesis investigates the policy implementation of Universal Credit (UC), and how welfare behavio...
Universal Credit is a major change in the UK’s social security system which will affect around eight...
Objectives: to understand the impact of the roll out of Universal Credit (UC) from the perspectives ...
Policymakers seeking to reform social security systems have frequently confronted a central tension:...
In recent years, a number of welfare reforms have been introduced in the UK by Conservative-led gove...
Introduced in the United Kingdom in 2012, Universal Credit (UC) is a welfare benefit that replaces s...
In this paper we explore whether the recent rise in food bank usage in the UK has been induced by th...
Many factors have contributed to the development of credit markets, easing access of households to c...
Introduction The UK social security system is being transformed by the implementation of Universal C...
Housing has been unjustifiably neglected in comparative welfare state research. The banking crisis o...