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Getting Welfare to Work - Street-Level Governance in Australia, the UK, and the Netherlands (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,260
Discovery Miles 32 600
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Getting Welfare to Work - Street-Level Governance in Australia, the UK, and the Netherlands (Hardcover)
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Getting Welfare to Work traces the radical reform of the
Australian, UK, and Dutch public employment services systems.
Starting with major changes from 1998, this book examines how each
national system has moved from traditional public services towards
more privately provided and market-based methods. Each of these
three countries developed innovative forms of contracting-out and
complex incentive regimes to motivate welfare clients and to
control the agencies charged with helping them. The Australian
system pioneered the use of large, national contracts for services
to all unemployed jobseekers. By the end of our study period this
system was entirely outsourced to private agencies. Meanwhile the
UK elected a form of contestability under Blair and Cameron,
culminating in a new public-private financing model known as the
'Work Programme'. The Dutch had evolved their far more complex
system from a traditional public service approach to one using a
variety of specific contracts for private agencies. These
innovations have changed welfare delivery and created both
opportunities and new constraints for policy makers. Getting
Welfare to Work tells the story of these bold policy reforms from
the perspective of street-level bureaucrats. Interviews and surveys
in each country over a fifteen year period are used to critically
appraise this central pillar of the welfare state. The original
data analysed in Getting Welfare to Work provides a unique
comparative perspective on three intriguing systems. It points to
new ways of thinking about modes of governance, system design,
regulation of public services, and so-called activation of welfare
clients. It also sheds light on the predicament of third sector
organisations that contract to governments through competitive
tenders with precise performance monitoring, raising questions of
'mission drift'.
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