Can universal credit help loosen the grip of poverty?
In: IPPR progressive review, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 312-319
ISSN: 2573-2331
With a rising tide of in‐work poverty, we need to reform universal credit so people can build a better life
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In: IPPR progressive review, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 312-319
ISSN: 2573-2331
With a rising tide of in‐work poverty, we need to reform universal credit so people can build a better life
In: Social justice and public policySeeking fairness in diverse societies, S. 180-204
In: Social justice and public policy, S. 181-204
In: Public policy research: PPR, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 41-48
ISSN: 1744-540X
Katie Schmuecker and Paul Woods highlight the broken nature of England's local authority funding model, an opaque process that produces often inequable results, and set out four principles to guide reform of local government funding.
In: Public policy research: PPR, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 90-96
ISSN: 1744-540X
Gordon Brown has made clear that his first hundred days will see a major new push on the constitutional front. Guy Lodge and Katie Schmuecker argue that addressing the tensions within the Union between England and Scotland must play a central role in any reform agenda.
In: Public Policy Research, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 90-96
In: Public Policy Research, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 90-96
In: Devolution and social citizenship in the UK, S. 137-160
Most of the expansive literature on social citizenship follows its leading thinker, T. H. Marshall, and talks only about the British state, often referring only to England. But social citizenship rights require taxation, spending, effective public services and politics committed to them. They can only be as strong as politics makes them. That means that the distinctive territorial politics of the UK are reshaping citizenship rights as they reshape policies, obligations and finance across the UK. This timely book explores how changing territorial politics are impacting on social citizenship rights across the UK. The contributors contend that whilst territorial politics have always been major influences in the meaning and scope of social citizenship rights, devolved politics are now increasingly producing different social citizenship rights in different parts of the UK. Moreover, they are doing it in ways that few scholars or policymakers expect or can trace. Drawing on extensive research over the last 10 years, the book brings together leading scholars of devolution and citizenship to chart the connection between the politics of devolution and the meaning of social citizenship in the UK. The first part of the book connects the large, and largely distinct, literatures on citizenship, devolution and the welfare state. The empirical second part identifies the different issues that will shape the future territorial politics of citizenship in the UK: intergovernmental relations and finance; policy divergence; bureaucratic politics; public opinion; and the European Union. It will be welcomed by academics and students in social policy, public policy, citizenship studies, politics and political science
Social justice is a contested term, incorporated into the language of widely differing political positions. Those on the left argue that it requires intervention from the state to ensure equality, at least of opportunity; those on the right believe that it can be underpinned by the economics of the market place with little or no state intervention. To date, political philosophers have made relatively few serious attempts to explain how a theory of social justice translates into public policy. This important book, drawing on international experience and a distinguished panel of political philosophers and social scientists, addresses what the meaning of social justice is, and how it translates into the everyday concerns of public and social policy, in the context of both multiculturalism and globalisation