In 2012 the UK Government introduced the harshest regime of conditionality and sanctions in the history of the benefits system. The Government insists sanctions are not punitive, but critics call this into question. In particular, the regime has been charged with disproportionately affecting vulnerable people. Based on a survey and qualitative interviews with homeless people, this paper shows that they are disproportionately sanctioned, and argues that it is difficult to see the regime as anything but punishment - punishment not for refusing to participate in the labour market, but for being unable to do so through homelessness, poverty, and ill-health
This paper is situated within wider debates about the changing shape of policy and practice within t...
Punitive welfare conditionality, combining tough sanctions with minimal self-directed support, is a ...
Successive UK Governments have introduced a raft of legislation that has reducedthe level of support...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
Conditionality has always been a feature of welfare benefit entitlements in the United Kingdom – how...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
The project undertook fieldwork with three sets of respondents: semi-structured interviews with 52 k...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Punitive welfare conditionality, combining tough sanctions with minimal self-directed support, is a ...
In a contemporary evolution of the tutelary state, welfare reform in the United Kingdom has been cha...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
The author of this Alternatives paper reflects on the findings of the Welfare Conditionality projec...
This paper is situated within wider debates about the changing shape of policy and practice within t...
Punitive welfare conditionality, combining tough sanctions with minimal self-directed support, is a ...
Successive UK Governments have introduced a raft of legislation that has reducedthe level of support...
A defining feature of U.K. welfare reform since 2010 has been the concerted move towards greater com...
Conditionality has always been a feature of welfare benefit entitlements in the United Kingdom – how...
Benefit sanctions are now a central component of the UK’s increasingly conditional social security s...
Throughout the history of National Insurance in the UK, there has been relatively little emphasis on...
The project undertook fieldwork with three sets of respondents: semi-structured interviews with 52 k...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Punitive welfare conditionality, combining tough sanctions with minimal self-directed support, is a ...
In a contemporary evolution of the tutelary state, welfare reform in the United Kingdom has been cha...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
British policy makers have increasingly sought to intensify and extend welfare conditionality. A dis...
The author of this Alternatives paper reflects on the findings of the Welfare Conditionality projec...
This paper is situated within wider debates about the changing shape of policy and practice within t...
Punitive welfare conditionality, combining tough sanctions with minimal self-directed support, is a ...
Successive UK Governments have introduced a raft of legislation that has reducedthe level of support...