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Introduction to themed special issue: exploring 'welfare' attitudes and experiences

Public policy reform over several decades has succeeded in systematically impoverishing and worsening the social and economic conditions of poor, single young men. That this group is the most prone to criminality and criminalisation, while being pushed further into the margins of the licit and illic...

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Published in:The journal of poverty and social justice : research, policy, practice policy, practice, 2016-10, Vol.24 (3), p.215-216
Main Authors: Hudson, John, Patrick, Ruth, Wincup, Emma
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Language:English
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container_title The journal of poverty and social justice : research, policy, practice
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description Public policy reform over several decades has succeeded in systematically impoverishing and worsening the social and economic conditions of poor, single young men. That this group is the most prone to criminality and criminalisation, while being pushed further into the margins of the licit and illicit economy, has been a central feature of long-term and growing crime trends. The article argues that successive governments have been unwise to neglect the poverty of unemployed,single young men into young adulthood. Their comparatively unfavourable treatment (as the most‘undeserving’ of the ‘undeserving poor’) has impoverished a group renowned for being crime-prone.
doi_str_mv 10.1332/175982716X14721954315048
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Social Science Premium Collection; Politics Collection; Sociology Collection; PAIS Index; Bristol University Press; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Attitudes
Crime
Criminal statistics
Criminality
Criminalization
Economic conditions
Low income groups
Men
Poverty
Prone
Public opinion
Public policy
Reforms
Unemployed people
Welfare
Welfare services
Young adults
Young men
title Introduction to themed special issue: exploring 'welfare' attitudes and experiences
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