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Welfare Reform, Jobcentre Plus and the Street-Level Bureaucracy: Towards Inconsistent and Discriminatory Welfare for Severely Disadvantaged Groups?
75
Citations
13
References
2011
Year
Welfare ReformsPublic WelfareDiscriminationLawUk Welfare ReformEducationJobcentre PlusPolicy AnalysisWelfare EconomicsDefining FeatureSocial Policy ResearchStreet-level BureaucracyHuman WelfareSocial InequalityPublic PolicySocial PolicyEmploymentEmployment LawWelfare ReformPolicy StudiesWelfare StateWelfare PolicyPublic EconomicsSociologyBusinessLabor LawUnemployment
A defining feature of UK welfare reform has been concerted moves towards greater conditionality and sanctioning which has stimulated much academic debate. However, few policy articles have sought to examine how welfare reforms are actually implemented. Lipsky (1980) has shown that the intentions of policy makers may be frustrated by the behaviour of public service workers operating in a ‘corrupted world of service’. This article draws upon the findings of the evaluation of the Jobseekers Mandatory Activity to discuss how key welfare reforms are likely to be implemented. It argues that that discretion remains a significant feature of front-line practice with potentially profound implications for severely disadvantaged groups.
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