Inside the Welfare State

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A01=Virginia Noble
Advisory Subcommittees
allowance
Anomalies Regulations
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Author_Virginia Noble
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British welfare policy discrimination
bureaucratic decision making
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Chief Offi Cer
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Local Insurance Offi
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Lone Women
national
National Assistance
National Assistance Act
National Assistance Allowances
National Insurance
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Post-war Welfare
postwar social welfare
social
social policy Britain
Special Offi Cers
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Welfare Department
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welfare state exclusion
World War

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415701877
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Nov 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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By moving beyond consideration of the welfare legislation enacted in the 1940s, this book explains how government aid was actually provided in the new British welfare state created just after World War II. Revealing dimensions of social policy that have been neglected by scholars, this study uncovers the practices of the officials who decided how welfare would be distributed. Between 1945 and 1965, social policy was in a state of flux, as officials sought to reconcile the new welfare state’s message of unqualified inclusion with deeply ingrained norms that militated against providing state aid to working-age men, to women who had even a tenuous connection to a male wage-earner, or to black and Asian immigrants who lacked an authentic "British" identity. Fusing the rationales of the poor law and the technologies of the modern bureaucratic state, various government branches tried to shape the behavior and attitudes of those seeking benefits. These mechanisms of welfare distribution created a bureaucratic language and logic that foreshadowed the more publicized, politicized anxieties that would surface as the welfare state itself came under attack later in the 20th century.

Virginia Noble is partner at McGill and Noble Attorneys in Durham, North Carolina. She has taught at the University of North Carolina.

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