Publication | Open Access
Applying Rawlsian Social Justice to Welfare Reform: An Unexpected Finding for Social Work
22
Citations
37
References
2005
Year
Public WelfareSocial WorkersRawlsian JusticeSocial Work PolicySocial StratificationSocial WorkSocial SciencesSocial Policy ResearchSocial Justice IssuesHuman WelfareUnexpected FindingHealth SciencesSocial InequalityPublic PolicyRawlsian Social JusticeWelfare StateSociologySocial PolicyJusticeSocial Justice
This paper sketches social workers' understanding of social justice and reliance on Rawls (1971), highlights findings about "hard to employ" welfare recipients facing welfare reform, and articulates the parameters of Rawlsian justice (Rawls, 1999a; 2001) with particular emphasis on people who have been on welfare for long. The paper shows that social workers do not have any space to maneuver in Rawlsian justice to uphold justice for long-term welfare recipients, and welfare reform's "work first" stipulation does not violate Rawlsian justice. The paper raises some questions about social workers' continued reliance on Rawls. It suggests social workers update the literature to reflect Rawls's revised and clarified vision of justice and apply it appropriately.
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