230 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1992. In this volume the authors discuss that although the idea that the main object of social security is to regulate the lives of poor people rather than to relieve their poverty which fell into disfavour in the post-war heyday of the welfare state; that this idea has more recently returned, as mass unemployment increases the pressure on welfare budgets and the weakness of the British economy calls into question our ability to maintain social spending.

    Introduction: The birth of a myth 2. Culture, Structure and Failure: The underclass 3. Values and Dependency 4. The Claiming Experience 5. Dependency or Captivity? 6. Dependency and Power

    Biography

    Hartley Dean, Peter Taylor-Gooby