Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom

Jordan (2000) notes how while there is a possible confluence between social work practice and New Labour’s social inclusion agenda, social work has been excluded from it. The explanation for this lays in the narrow definition, focusing almost entirely on exclusion from paid employment that frame...

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Main Author: Chris Grover
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Work & Society 2006-01-01
Series:Social Work and Society
Online Access:https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/178
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spelling doaj-a18c0cdcad9f47bb88a7227833c88ce12021-05-29T05:41:35ZengSocial Work & SocietySocial Work and Society1613-89532006-01-0141Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United KingdomChris Grover0Lancaster UniversityJordan (2000) notes how while there is a possible confluence between social work practice and New Labour’s social inclusion agenda, social work has been excluded from it. The explanation for this lays in the narrow definition, focusing almost entirely on exclusion from paid employment that frames political concerns with social exclusion in the UK. However, the policies designed to tackle social exclusion even in this rather narrow approach should be of concern to social work because it is possible that they will exacerbate rather than tackle the exclusion that many social work clients face. To explore these issues this paper draws upon Penna’s (2001) argument that there is a tension between the desire to tackle social exclusion at a national level and global economic governance that constructs neo-liberalism as being the only way forward to economic prosperity and stability because the operation of neo-liberal political economy creates social exclusion. The paper examines these tensions by focusing upon what Adler (2004) identifies as a new model – the employment model – for the relief of poverty in the UK. The paper discusses the antecedents of the employment model in the shift from Keynesianism to neo-liberalism. The paper demonstrates that the employment model is concerned with regulating a number dilemmas related to labour power and the wage relation that have emerged from the acceptance of the global neo-liberal economy as being the only viable economic paradigm. It then goes on to discuss the contingent nature of this process, highlighting the contradictions raised by the employment models in terms of economic development and the tackling of social exclusion. https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/178
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Grover
spellingShingle Chris Grover
Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
Social Work and Society
author_facet Chris Grover
author_sort Chris Grover
title Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
title_short Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
title_full Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
title_fullStr Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
title_full_unstemmed Welfare Reform, Accumulation and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom
title_sort welfare reform, accumulation and social exclusion in the united kingdom
publisher Social Work & Society
series Social Work and Society
issn 1613-8953
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Jordan (2000) notes how while there is a possible confluence between social work practice and New Labour’s social inclusion agenda, social work has been excluded from it. The explanation for this lays in the narrow definition, focusing almost entirely on exclusion from paid employment that frames political concerns with social exclusion in the UK. However, the policies designed to tackle social exclusion even in this rather narrow approach should be of concern to social work because it is possible that they will exacerbate rather than tackle the exclusion that many social work clients face. To explore these issues this paper draws upon Penna’s (2001) argument that there is a tension between the desire to tackle social exclusion at a national level and global economic governance that constructs neo-liberalism as being the only way forward to economic prosperity and stability because the operation of neo-liberal political economy creates social exclusion. The paper examines these tensions by focusing upon what Adler (2004) identifies as a new model – the employment model – for the relief of poverty in the UK. The paper discusses the antecedents of the employment model in the shift from Keynesianism to neo-liberalism. The paper demonstrates that the employment model is concerned with regulating a number dilemmas related to labour power and the wage relation that have emerged from the acceptance of the global neo-liberal economy as being the only viable economic paradigm. It then goes on to discuss the contingent nature of this process, highlighting the contradictions raised by the employment models in terms of economic development and the tackling of social exclusion.
url https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/178
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