Description
Book SynopsisPublished in association with the SPA, with specially commissioned reviews of pensions, health care, conditionality and housing and including a themed section on personalised budgets, this book examines important debates in the field.
Trade Review"Social Policy Review is essential reading for up-to-date analysis of the key social policy issues of the day, by authors who know their subjects inside-out." Jane Millar, University of Bath
"This latest edition of SPR provides expert commentaries on a wide range of social policy issues that, taken together, have much to say about the current state of welfare in the UK and beyond." Nick Ellison, University of York
Table of ContentsPart One: Continuities and change in UK social policy; Behaviour, Choice, and British Pension Policy ~ Gordon L Clark; Coalition Health Policy: A Game of Two Halves or the Final Whistle for the NHS? ~ Martin Powell; Citizenship, conduct and conditionality: sanction and support in the 21st century UK welfare state ~ Peter Dwyer; Housing policy in the austerity age and beyond ~ Mark Stephens and Adam Stephenson; Part Two: Contributions from the Social Policy Association Conference 2015; ‘Progressive’ Neo-Liberal Conservatism and the Welfare State: Incremental Reform or Long-Term Destruction? ~ Robert M. Page; ‘There are quite a lot of people faking [it], the government has got to do something really’: exploring out-of-work benefit claimants’ attitudes towards welfare reform and conditionality ~ Ruth Patrick; The Troubled Families Programme: in, for and against the state? ~ Stephen Crossley; What counts as ‘counter-conduct’? A governmental analysis of resistance in the face of compulsory community care ~ Hannah Jobling; Part Three: Individualised budgets in social policy; Social insurance for individualised disability support – implementing the Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) ~ Christiane Purcal, Karen R Fisher and Ariella Meltzer; Right time, right place? The experiences of rough sleepers and practitioners in the receipt and delivery of personalised budgets ~ Philip Brown; Personal health budgets: Implementation and outcomes ~ Karen Jones, Julien Forder, James Caiels, Elizabeth Welch and Karen Windle; Personalised care funding in Norway - a case of gradual co-production ~ Karen Christensen; Individualised funding for older people and the ethic of care ~ Philippa Locke and Karen West.