By George Maier, a master’s student of Critical Theory and Politics at the University of Nottingham. His research interests focus on complicating perspectives of inequality. @GeorgeMaier During a House of Commons debate on the government’s flagship Universal Credit programme this January, Erewash MP Maggie Throup asserted: ‘let’s face it, self-esteem and dignity are so much higher when income comes from earnings rather than from the taxpayer’. Her remark speaks to the extent that demonisation of the working class has became embedded within our political system, it is framed as if general knowledge, as if this is accepted and depoliticised speech. In reality, her comment is deeply divisive in a community already weakened by six years of regr...
In a recent statement, Labour’s Chuka Umunna seemed to suggest the BAME population form one homogene...
The LSE’s new International Inequalities Institute has hosted three major thinkers on inequality: To...
Education is, or should be, a gateway to a better life, a better understanding of ourselves in a com...
We find it easier to talk about class in purely economic terms. Lisa McKenzie argues that in fact ou...
Mike Savage discusses the results of the largest British class survey ever conducted. It shows that ...
Sean Swan recently wrote an article for Democratic Audit in which he argued that the concept of clas...
The paper below explores the possibility that perceptions of unfairness may be much more powerful th...
A spectre is haunting Britain, not the spectre of communism, and yet the UK’s most significant curre...
Class and class divisions remain central forces in shaping the ways we live. Indeed, arguably, in ne...
In his Budget, George Osborne claimed inequality is at its lowest level in 28 years. Yet recent rese...
Personal Reflections by Mike Savage It hardly needs emphasis that rising inequality within and betwe...
[Extract] The Coalition's pledge to revive work for the dole and income management has reignited the...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
This article explores the concepts of dignity at work and worker voice in the public workplace durin...
The relationship of women to conditions of material austerity is often characterised as having two m...
In a recent statement, Labour’s Chuka Umunna seemed to suggest the BAME population form one homogene...
The LSE’s new International Inequalities Institute has hosted three major thinkers on inequality: To...
Education is, or should be, a gateway to a better life, a better understanding of ourselves in a com...
We find it easier to talk about class in purely economic terms. Lisa McKenzie argues that in fact ou...
Mike Savage discusses the results of the largest British class survey ever conducted. It shows that ...
Sean Swan recently wrote an article for Democratic Audit in which he argued that the concept of clas...
The paper below explores the possibility that perceptions of unfairness may be much more powerful th...
A spectre is haunting Britain, not the spectre of communism, and yet the UK’s most significant curre...
Class and class divisions remain central forces in shaping the ways we live. Indeed, arguably, in ne...
In his Budget, George Osborne claimed inequality is at its lowest level in 28 years. Yet recent rese...
Personal Reflections by Mike Savage It hardly needs emphasis that rising inequality within and betwe...
[Extract] The Coalition's pledge to revive work for the dole and income management has reignited the...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
This article explores the concepts of dignity at work and worker voice in the public workplace durin...
The relationship of women to conditions of material austerity is often characterised as having two m...
In a recent statement, Labour’s Chuka Umunna seemed to suggest the BAME population form one homogene...
The LSE’s new International Inequalities Institute has hosted three major thinkers on inequality: To...
Education is, or should be, a gateway to a better life, a better understanding of ourselves in a com...