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ARTICLES

Lone Parents and Welfare-to-work Conditionality: Necessary, Just, Effective?

Pages 124-140 | Received 11 Jul 2012, Accepted 23 Nov 2012, Published online: 14 Jun 2013
 

Abstract

Since the 1990s OECD nations have witnessed a rapid expansion in the use of conditionality within welfare to work programmes in the shift towards ‘activating’ welfare regimes. This trend raises a number of interrelated normative and empirical questions which we crystallise in the dimensions of necessity, justice and effectiveness. Lone parents in the UK make an instructive case study within which to assess these issues given that they have experienced wholesale change in the work expectations and demands placed upon them since the late 1990s. This article traces the evolution and justificatory ‘policy stories’ behind these reforms as well as evidence around their employment, income and well-being outcomes for lone parents. It concludes that it is extremely difficult to reconcile the research evidence with the persistent and strengthening policy claims of both New Labour and Coalition governments that current welfare to work conditionality for lone parents is necessary, just or effective.

Notes

1For further details see Gingerbread (2012).

2Up to a maximum level of £175 for a family with one child.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Adam Whitworth

Dr Adam Whitworth is a lecturer in the Department for Geography, University of Sheffield, UK, specialising in the spatial analysis of social policy, particular issues of welfare-to-work reform, work and well-being and linkages between inequality and crime

Julia Griggs

Since 2012 Dr Julia Griggs is a researcher at the National Centre for Social Research where she works on a wide range of social policy issues. Prior to this she worked at the Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, researching around fathering, grandparenting and sanctions

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