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Dealing with Welfare Conditionality

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This edited collection considers how conditional welfare policies and services are implemented and experienced by a diverse range of welfare service users across a range of UK policy domains includ...
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  • 01 October 2021
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This edited collection considers how conditional welfare policies and services are implemented and experienced by a diverse range of welfare service users across a range of UK policy domains including social security, homelessness, migration and criminal justice.

The book showcases the insights and findings of a series of distinct, independent studies undertaken by early career researchers associated with the ESRC funded Welfare Conditionality project. Each chapter presents a new empirical analysis of data generated in fieldwork conducted with practitioners charged with interpreting and delivering policy, and welfare service users who are at the sharp end of welfare services shaped by behavioural conditionality.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 200
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Series: Welfare Conditionality
Publication Date: 01 October 2021
ISBN: 9781447341826
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, Social welfare, social policy and social services, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Services & Welfare, Poverty and precarity
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Peter Dwyer is Professor of Social Policy at the University of York, UK. His research and teaching focuses on social citizenship. He led the large ESRC fundedWelfare Conditionality:Sanctions Support and Behaviour Change (2013-2018) project.

Editor's introduction ~ Peter Dwyer

Supporting people? Universal Credit, conditionality and the recalibration of vulnerability ~ Helen Stinson

Punishment, powerlessness and bounded agency: exploring the role of welfare conditionality with ‘at risk’ women attempting to live ‘a good life’ ~ Larissa Povey

Resisting welfare conditionality: constraint, choice and dissent among homeless migrants ~ Regina Serpa

No strings attached? An exploration of employment support services offered by third sector homelessness organisations ~ Katy Jones

Exploring the impact of welfare conditionality on Roma migrants in the UK ~ Liviu Dinu and Lisa Scullion

Exploring the behavioural outcomes of family-based intensive interventions ~ Emily Ball

Editor’s afterword ~ Peter Dwyer