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Over the last three decades Britain has witnessed an unprecedented
rise in the number of people receiving welfare benefits that has
provoked fears of a growing underclass and mass welfare dependency.
The making of a welfare class? provides the first comprehensive
analysis of the reasons for this growth and subjects notions of
welfare dependency and the underclass to empirical test. It focuses
on four principal groups of benefit recipients - children and
families, retirement pensioners, disabled people, and unemployed
people - and, using important new evidence, explores the relative
importance of economic, demographic, institutional and normative
factors in the pattern of growth. The book addresses a phenomenon -
growth in benefit recipiency - which is common to all advanced
industrial countries and nowhere well understood. As a central
focus of government policy and a key development in modern society,
the issues explored in the book will therefore be of interest to
academics and policy commentators alike. Written in an accessible
style and assuming no prior knowledge, with succinct chapters,
elegant summaries and extensive use of graphics, complex arguments
appear simple. A comprehensive glossary of technical terms is
included. As a result, The making of a welfare class? is compulsory
reading for undergraduates and postgraduate students of sociology,
social policy and economics and anyone else interested in the
development of modern British society and welfare policy.
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