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Compulsory Income Management in Australia and New Zealand

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More than a decade on from their conception, this book reflects on the consequences of income management policies in Australia and New Zealand. Drawing on a three-year study, it explores the lived...
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  • 19 July 2022
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More than a decade on from their conception, this book reflects on the consequences of income management policies in Australia and New Zealand.

Drawing on a three-year study, it explores the lived experience of those for whom core welfare benefits and services are dependent on government conceptions of ‘responsible’ behaviour. It analyses whether officially claimed positive intentions and benefits of the schemes are outweighed by negative impacts that deepen the poverty and stigma of marginalised and disadvantaged groups.

This novel study considers the future of this form of welfare conditionality and addresses wider questions of fairness and social justice.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 236
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Series: Research in Comparative and Global Social Policy
Publication Date: 19 July 2022
ISBN: 9781447361497
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, Welfare and benefit systems, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Services & Welfare, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Security, Poverty and precarity
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Greg Marston is Professor in the School of Social Science at The University of Queensland.

Louise Humpage is Honorary Associate Professor in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Auckland.

Philip Mendes is Professor in the Department of Social Work at Monash University.

Shelley Bielefeld is ARC DECRA Fellow and Senior Lecturer in the Griffith Law School and the Law Futures Centre at Griffith University.

Michelle Peterie is Research Fellow in the Sydney Centre for Healthy Societies at The University of Sydney.

Zoe Staines is ARC DECRA Fellow in the School of Social Science at The University of Queensland.

1. Framing welfare conditionality

2. Why Income Management?

3. Barriers to implementing Compulsory Income Management

4. Identity and emotion

5. Procedural, consumer and contractual rights, and access to justice

6. Resistance and reform: individual and collective agency

7. Voluntary Income Management and financial education

8. Recalibrating social security and reimagining work