Cash and care: Policy challenges in the welfare state
Cash and care: Policy challenges in the welfare state
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Abstract
Recent social trends and policy developments have called into question the divide between the provision of income support and social care services. This book examines this in light of key trends. It presents new evidence on the links between cash – whether from earnings from paid work, social security benefits, and payments for disabled people and carers – and social disadvantage, care, and disability. The book also presents theoretical perspectives on the need for and provision of care, which some commentators have described as a ‘new social risk’, and offers new insights into traditional forms of risk, such as poverty, disability, access to credit, and money management. It provides an analysis of childcare and informal support for sick, disabled, or elderly people in the context of increasing female labour market participation and the introduction of cash allowances to pay for care, and posits a new look at both disabled people and older people in their roles as active citizens, whose views and experiences should help shape both policy and practice.
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Front Matter
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Part One Introduction
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Part Two New theoretical perspectives on care and policy
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Part Three Traditional forms of disadvantage: new perspectives
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Five
The costs of caring for a disabled child
Jan Pahl
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Six
Disability, poverty and living standards: reviewing Australian evidence and policies1
Peter Saunders
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Seven
Consumers without money: consumption patterns and citizenship among low-income families in Scandinavian welfare societies
Pernille Hohnen
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Eight
Affordable credit for low-income households
Sharon Collard
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Nine
Carers and employment in a work-focused welfare state
Hilary Arksey andPeter A. Kemp
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Five
The costs of caring for a disabled child
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Part Four Families, care work and the state
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Ten
Paying family caregivers: evaluating different models
Caroline Glendinning
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Eleven
Developments in Austrian care arrangements: women between free choice and informal care
Margareta Kreimer
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Twelve
When informal care becomes a paid job: the case of Personal Assistance Budgets in Flanders
Jef Breda and others
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Thirteen
Better off in work? Work, security and welfare for lone mothers
Jane Millar
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Fourteen
Reciprocity, lone parents and state subsidy for informal childcare
Christine Skinner andNaomi Finch
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Fifteen
Helping out at home: children's contributions to sustaining work and care in lone-mother families
Tess Ridge
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Ten
Paying family caregivers: evaluating different models
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Part Five From welfare subjects to active citizens
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Sixteen
Making connections: supporting new forms of engagement by marginalised groups
Karen Postle andPeter Beresford
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Seventeen
Independent living: the role of the disability movement in the development of government policy
Jenny Morris
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Eighteen
Securing the dignity and quality of life of older citizens
Hilary Land
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Sixteen
Making connections: supporting new forms of engagement by marginalised groups
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Part Six Conclusions
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End Matter
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