ABSTRACT

Welfare: Needs, Rights and Risks addresses the question of how people get access to social welfare in the UK today. It explores the public, political and professional definitions, constructions and conflicts about who should receive social welfare and under what conditions. In a period during which the rationing, targeting and selective provision of welfare have become more significant, more visible and more disputed, this book examines how individuals and groups come to be defined as in need, at risk or deserving of welfare.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|35 pages

The Contested Concept of Need

chapter 2|51 pages

Rationing Health Care

chapter 4|47 pages

Children's Needs: Who Decides?

chapter 5|45 pages

‘Give 'em What They Deserve'

The Young Offender and Youth Justice Policy

chapter 7|13 pages

Review