ABSTRACT

Postmodern ideas have been vastly influential in the social sciences and beyond. However, their impact on the study of social policy has been minimal. Postmodernity and the Fragmentation of Welfare analyses the potential for a postmodern or cultural turn in welfare as it treats postmodernity as an evolving canon -from the seminal works of Baudrillard, Foucault and Lyotard, through to recent theories of the 'risk society'.
Already disorientated by globalisation, new technologies and the years of new right ascendancy, welfare faces a significant challenge in the postmodern. It suggests that, rather than universality and state provision, the new social policy will be consumerised and fragmented -a welfare state of ambivalence.
With contributions from authors coming from a variety of fields offering very different perspectives on postmodernity and welfare Postmodernity and the Fragmentation of Welfare also keeps social policy's intellectual inheritance in view. By exploring ways in which theorisations of postmodernity might improve understanding of welfare issues in the 1990s and assessing the relevance of theories of diversity and difference to mainstream and critical social policy traditions, this book will be and essential text for all students of social policy, social administration, social work and sociology.

part |35 pages

Critical Social Policy and Postmodernity

chapter |18 pages

‘One Step Beyond'

Critical Social Policy in a ‘Postmodern' Britain?

chapter |15 pages

Postmodernity and the Future of Welfare

Whose Critiques, Whose Social Policy?

part |49 pages

Social Divisions and Social Exclusion

chapter |15 pages

New Horizons? New Insights?

Postmodernising Social Policy and the Case of Sexuality

chapter |17 pages

Reopening the Gift

Race and the Critique of Normative Social Policy

chapter |15 pages

Individualisation Processes and Social Policy

Insecurity, Reflexivity and Risk in the Restructuring of Contemporary British Health and Housing Policies

part |65 pages

Governance and New Technologies of Control in the New Social Policy

chapter |16 pages

Thriving on Chaos?

Managerialisation and Social Welfare

chapter |14 pages

Welfare Direct

Informatics and the Emergence of Self-Service Welfare?

part |43 pages

Citizenship Amid the Fragmented Nation State