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Youth Unemployment and Devolution

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Youth unemployment and work insecurity have been prevailing issues for governments across Western Europe since the 2008 financial crisis. These issues have intensified after Brexit and the pandemic...
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  • 19 August 2025
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Youth unemployment and work insecurity have been prevailing issues for governments across Western Europe since the 2008 financial crisis. These issues have intensified after Brexit and the pandemic, with young people consistently overrepresented in the gig economy and all forms of work insecurity.

Against a backdrop of increasingly mixed economies of welfare in the UK’s liberal welfare regime and work first policy narrative, this book explores civil society responses to youth unemployment in England, Scotland and Wales. Using original, empirical research to challenge the privileging of methodological nationalism in the study of welfare regimes, it analyses the scale and nature of policy and civil society responses to youth unemployment and work insecurity between three nations of the UK from the perspectives of policy makers, strategic thinkers and case workers delivering to young people on the ground.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 160
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Series: Civil Society and Social Change
Publication Date: 19 August 2025
ISBN: 9781447364351
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General, Civics and citizenship, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civics & Citizenship, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, Political economy, Poverty and precarity, Sociology: work and labour, Welfare and benefit systems, Regional, state and other local government policies
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“A timely, empirically rich and insightful analysis of public policy and civil society responses to youth unemployment. A must-read for all interested in contemporary social welfare, the economy and societal well-being” Paul Chaney, Cardiff University
Sioned Pearce is Lecturer in Social Policy at the School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University.

1. Youth unemployment, work insecurity and territorial rescaling

2. Youth policy, work and welfare

3. A decentralised, street-level approach to analysis

4. Devolved civil society approaches

5. Devolved civil society networks

6. Street-level, cross-jurisdictional perspectives

7. Ideologically driven, peripheral policy innovation

8. Conclusions

Appendix: Detail and history of youth employment policy in the UK, England, Scotland and Wales