David Cameron’s deal to cut social benefits for EU citizens may in part be a ploy in the internal politics of the Conservative Party. But it’s also the latest push in a long drive by UK governments to squeeze a once universalist welfare regime into a system of discrimination. Here, analysts from MigrationWork describe how the idea of ‘(un)deservingness’ has been applied since Thatcher and the miner’s strike to subvert the principle of universal entitlement, in parallel on two fronts: class and nationality
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
One surprise from the referendum result was the way in which areas of high public spending showed no...
On Monday, the British government introduced its new ‘Homes for Ukraine’ scheme which is presented a...
The UK could make both Britons and EU migrants wait four years before having access to in-work benef...
Providing the resources of the welfare state to increasingly diverse populations has been a controve...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Informed by particular theories of migration and of new global migrations as problematic European st...
Growing concerns and hostility towards continuing large-scale flows of immigrants following the two ...
Growing hostility towards large-scale immigration following the EU enlargement (2004) and, later, th...
Starting from the observation that recent immigration controls seem ‘hewn from the same rock’ as the...
This article begins by examining UK government discourse on welfare and migration for the period 201...
Welfare chauvinism first appeared in academic literature when Norwegian and Danish political parties...
This article considers how chauvinistic welfare policies operate as a bordering practice. Taking the...
Welfare states across Europe are undergoing far-reaching reforms in response to the pressures of glo...
The government’s efforts to bring down net migration have had significant negative impacts on migran...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
One surprise from the referendum result was the way in which areas of high public spending showed no...
On Monday, the British government introduced its new ‘Homes for Ukraine’ scheme which is presented a...
The UK could make both Britons and EU migrants wait four years before having access to in-work benef...
Providing the resources of the welfare state to increasingly diverse populations has been a controve...
This article shows that the unemployed are broadly supportive of welfare reforms which have led to i...
Informed by particular theories of migration and of new global migrations as problematic European st...
Growing concerns and hostility towards continuing large-scale flows of immigrants following the two ...
Growing hostility towards large-scale immigration following the EU enlargement (2004) and, later, th...
Starting from the observation that recent immigration controls seem ‘hewn from the same rock’ as the...
This article begins by examining UK government discourse on welfare and migration for the period 201...
Welfare chauvinism first appeared in academic literature when Norwegian and Danish political parties...
This article considers how chauvinistic welfare policies operate as a bordering practice. Taking the...
Welfare states across Europe are undergoing far-reaching reforms in response to the pressures of glo...
The government’s efforts to bring down net migration have had significant negative impacts on migran...
Underpinned by the assumption that unemployed persons are passive recipients of social security, rec...
One surprise from the referendum result was the way in which areas of high public spending showed no...
On Monday, the British government introduced its new ‘Homes for Ukraine’ scheme which is presented a...