Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'

This thesis examines the UK Coalition Government’s ‘Removal of the Spare Room Subsidy’ – known by almost everybody else as the ‘bedroom tax’. The policy has been the subject of political controversy, academic analysis from across disciplines and a number of other doctoral theses. So why is yet anoth...

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Main Author: Meers, Jed
Other Authors: Hunter, Caroline
Published: University of York 2018
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.737926
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7379262019-01-08T03:35:43ZReconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'Meers, JedHunter, Caroline2018This thesis examines the UK Coalition Government’s ‘Removal of the Spare Room Subsidy’ – known by almost everybody else as the ‘bedroom tax’. The policy has been the subject of political controversy, academic analysis from across disciplines and a number of other doctoral theses. So why is yet another PhD on the policy warranted? This research is the first detailed examination of the parallel ‘discretionary housing payment’ (DHP) scheme. The arguments it puts forward fall into three parts. Part I makes two sets of interlinked conceptual arguments. First, that Gallie's formulation of ‘essentially contested concepts' applies to the broad-ranging 'home studies' literature. Second, that the centrality of the DHP scheme to the operation of the bedroom tax is best analysed with a distinction between structural and epistemic discretion. Part II outlines the two empirical strands that support the analysis: an online vignette study with workers tasked with DHP scheme decision-making; and telephone interviews with tenants affected by the Social Sector Size Criteria (SSSC) policy. Part III builds on the theoretical arguments made in Part I by drawing on Valverde’s work on the sociology of knowledge to analyse: (i) DHP application forms, (ii) the decision-making of administrative workers, and (iii) the obligations imposed on affected tenants. This is, therefore, a thesis which is focused on a narrow policy, but which makes wider-ranging theoretical arguments. It is hoped that the findings and its theoretical approach will help to inform future studies into the discretionary mitigation of welfare reforms and contribute to ongoing debates over the ‘concept of home’ in the home studies literature.University of Yorkhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.737926http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/19756/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description This thesis examines the UK Coalition Government’s ‘Removal of the Spare Room Subsidy’ – known by almost everybody else as the ‘bedroom tax’. The policy has been the subject of political controversy, academic analysis from across disciplines and a number of other doctoral theses. So why is yet another PhD on the policy warranted? This research is the first detailed examination of the parallel ‘discretionary housing payment’ (DHP) scheme. The arguments it puts forward fall into three parts. Part I makes two sets of interlinked conceptual arguments. First, that Gallie's formulation of ‘essentially contested concepts' applies to the broad-ranging 'home studies' literature. Second, that the centrality of the DHP scheme to the operation of the bedroom tax is best analysed with a distinction between structural and epistemic discretion. Part II outlines the two empirical strands that support the analysis: an online vignette study with workers tasked with DHP scheme decision-making; and telephone interviews with tenants affected by the Social Sector Size Criteria (SSSC) policy. Part III builds on the theoretical arguments made in Part I by drawing on Valverde’s work on the sociology of knowledge to analyse: (i) DHP application forms, (ii) the decision-making of administrative workers, and (iii) the obligations imposed on affected tenants. This is, therefore, a thesis which is focused on a narrow policy, but which makes wider-ranging theoretical arguments. It is hoped that the findings and its theoretical approach will help to inform future studies into the discretionary mitigation of welfare reforms and contribute to ongoing debates over the ‘concept of home’ in the home studies literature.
author2 Hunter, Caroline
author_facet Hunter, Caroline
Meers, Jed
author Meers, Jed
spellingShingle Meers, Jed
Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
author_sort Meers, Jed
title Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
title_short Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
title_full Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
title_fullStr Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
title_full_unstemmed Reconceptualising home : a study of the UK 'bedroom tax'
title_sort reconceptualising home : a study of the uk 'bedroom tax'
publisher University of York
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.737926
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