ABSTRACT

This book studies welfare systems in Europe and beyond from the standpoint of women in vulnerable positions in society. These systems are under major transformations with new models of service delivery and management, austerity measures, requirements for cost-effectiveness, marketization, and the prioritization of services.

Divided into three parts:

  • Welfare service systems (not) responding to vulnerable situations of women
  • Women’s encounters with the welfare service system
  • Contradictions of informal support

this book considers the experiences and encounters with the service system of women in poverty, homeless women, women with substance use problems, women sentenced of crime, girls and young women in care, and refugees and asylum-seeking women.

Drawing upon research and critical discussions from Finland, Canada, Israel, Slovenia, Spain and the UK, this book provides new empirical findings and critical insights, and a valuable resource for the academics and students in social work, social policy, sociology and gender studies, but also for policy makers and professionals in social and health care.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

Women, vulnerabilities and welfare service systems

part I|55 pages

Welfare service systems (not) responding to vulnerable situations of women

chapter 2|13 pages

Vulnerability as lived experience

Marginalised women and girls in the UK

chapter 4|14 pages

Interpreting vulnerabilities facing women in urban life

A case study in Madrid, Spain

chapter 5|13 pages

Risky mothers

State–family relations, risk and the gendered reproduction of vulnerability in Canadian child welfare

part II|55 pages

Women’s encounters with the welfare service system

part III|48 pages

Contradictions of informal support

chapter 10|14 pages

Low-​income breadwinning Israeli mothers negotiating economic survival

The exchange of sex for material resources

chapter 11|14 pages

Vulnerability and agency

Women after prison in the Basque Autonomous Community, Spain

chapter 13|5 pages

Concluding remarks

A need for women-​specific welfare services