Mediating the claim? How ‘local ecosystems of support’ shape the operation and experience of UK social security
暂无分享,去创建一个
B. Geiger | Andrea Gibbons | Daniel Edmiston | Jo Ingold | L. Scullion | K. Summers | David Robertshaw | R. Vries | David Young
[1] H. Gwilym,et al. The Food Bank: A Safety-Net in Place of Welfare Security in Times of Austerity and the Covid-19 Crisis , 2022, Social Policy and Society.
[2] S. Weakley,et al. The COVID-19 pandemic: the essential role of the voluntary sector in emergency response and resilience planning , 2021, Voluntary Sector Review.
[3] D. Fletcher,et al. Violent bureaucracy: A critical analysis of the British public employment service , 2021, Critical Social Policy.
[4] R. Hick. Austerity, Localism, and the Possibility of Politics: Explaining Variation in Three Local Social Security Schemes Between Elected Councils in England , 2021, Sociological Research Online.
[5] C. Beatty,et al. Managing precarity: Food bank use by low‐income women workers in a changing welfare regime , 2021, Social Policy & Administration.
[6] Andrew Mackley,et al. Coronavirus: Withdrawing crisis social security measures , 2020 .
[7] I. Koch. The Guardians of the Welfare State: Universal Credit, Welfare Control and the Moral Economy of Frontline Work in Austerity Britain , 2020, Sociology.
[8] N. Harris,et al. Coronavirus and Social Security Entitlement in the UK , 2020 .
[9] Abigail Davis,et al. The Role of Social Support Networks in Helping Low Income Families through Uncertain Times , 2020, Social Policy and Society.
[10] K. Summers,et al. Universal simplicity? The alleged simplicity of Universal Credit from administrative and claimant perspectives , 2020, Journal of Poverty and Social Justice.
[11] M. Simpson,et al. Conditionality, discretion and TH Marshall’s ‘right to welfare’ , 2019, SSRN Electronic Journal.
[12] J. Kaufman. Intensity, moderation, and the pressures of expectation: Calculation and coercion in the street‐level practice of welfare conditionality , 2019, Social Policy & Administration.
[13] Jed Meers. Discretion As Blame Avoidance: Passing the Buck to Local Authorities in ‘Welfare Reform’ , 2019, Journal of Poverty and Social Justice.
[14] B. Pfau-Effinger,et al. Self-Responsibility of the “Active Social Citizen”: Different Types of the Policy Concept of “Active Social Citizenship” in Different Types of Welfare States , 2019, American Behavioral Scientist.
[15] Hulya Dagdeviren,et al. When rhetoric does not translate to reality: Hardship, empowerment and the third sector in austerity localism , 2018, The Sociological Review.
[16] A. Barford,et al. The depths of the cuts: the uneven geography of local government austerity , 2018, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society.
[17] F. Bennett. Advising in austerity: reflections on challenging times for advice agencies , 2018, Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law.
[18] Bernardo Zacka. When the State Meets the Street: Public Service and Moral Agency , 2017 .
[19] T. Baker,et al. Everyday Resistance to Workfare: Welfare Beneficiary Advocacy in Auckland, New Zealand , 2017, Social Policy and Society.
[20] Jane Millar,et al. Universal Credit: Assumptions, Contradictions and Virtual Reality , 2016, Social Policy and Society.
[21] L. Gilson. Michael Lipsky, Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Service , 2015 .
[22] J. Gutmann. Qualitative research practice: : a guide for social science students and researchers (2nd edn). , 2014 .
[23] J. Ritchie,et al. Qualitative Research Practice: A Guide for Social Science Students and Researchers , 2013 .
[24] S. Wright. Welfare-to-work, Agency and Personal Responsibility , 2012, Journal of Social Policy.
[25] K. Laidler,et al. Bureaucratic Justice , 2007, International journal of offender therapy and comparative criminology.
[26] Michael E. Adler. Fairness in Context , 2006 .