ABSTRACT

Contemporary welfare provision poses serious challenges for social policy. Large and rapid changes are said to be taking place in the way we live, work and relate to each other, characterised by anxiety and insecurity.Risk and Citizenship explores how new and diffrent forms of citizenship are evolving in the context of this 'risk society' and the implications for the development of social policy at both the macro and micro level.
This spirited and informed collection of papers by leading analysts addresses key questions related to welfare, citizenship and risk including: the nature of insecurity and social protection; the balance between inequality and egalitarianism; the relationship between governments and citizens; the parameters of citizenship; and the impact of risk assessment and risk management.
Risk and Citizenship offers a thought-provoking reading for student, practitioner or policy-maker. It provides:
* a review of current debates about risk, citizenship and welfare
* in-depth analysis of specific policy initiatives in social security and community care
* a new typology of welfare citizenship.

chapter |16 pages

Live and let love?

Reflections on the unfinished sexual revolution of our times

chapter |16 pages

Widening the scope of social policy

Families, financial services and the impact of technology

chapter |16 pages

Complex equalities

Redistribution, class and gender

chapter |15 pages

‘Work for those who can, security for those who cannot'

A third way in social security reform or fractured social citizenship? 1

chapter |15 pages

Managing the risk of unemployment

Is welfare restructuring undermining support for social security?

chapter |16 pages

Managing the body

Competing approaches to risk assessment in community care

chapter |15 pages

Social insecurity and the informal economy

Survival strategies on a South London estate