Academic literature on the topic 'British welfare state'

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Journal articles on the topic "British welfare state"

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Whiteside, Noel, and John Brown. "The British Welfare State." Economic History Review 49, no. 3 (August 1996): 617. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2597783.

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Thane, Pat. "The Origins of the British Welfare State." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 50, no. 3 (November 2019): 427–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_01448.

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George Boyer’s The Winding Road to the Welfare State, which traces the shift in Britain from the early nineteenth-century Poor Law to the post-1945 welfare state, is strongest and most useful in its analysis of the labor market in relation to poverty and insecurity and in its precise quantification of wages, poverty, insecurity, and public relief. It is much weaker when discussing how politics and public opinion shaped social policies; overlooking important areas of British state welfare, the book focuses upon unemployment and old-age policies. Nor is the book really about “Britain.” Most of the statistics and analyses refer to England and occasionally Wales. Scotland, with its different economic, administrative, and legal structures, though constitutionally in Britain, is barely mentioned. Notwithstanding Boyer’s contributions to the picture of how the British welfare state emerged, his version of Britain’s “winding road” falls short of the descriptions and analyses that many British publications have already provided within the past thirty years.
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Davies, Myfanwy. "Changing directions of the British Welfare State." Ethics and Social Welfare 8, no. 1 (October 24, 2013): 93–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17496535.2013.852350.

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Wilding, Paul. "The British Welfare State: Thatcherism's enduring legacy." Policy & Politics 20, no. 3 (July 1, 1992): 201–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/030557392782718706.

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Jordan, Bill, and Marcus Redley. "Polarisation, Underclass and the Welfare State." Work, Employment and Society 8, no. 2 (June 1994): 153–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/095001709482001.

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Both the British government and the Labour leadership (through the Commission on Social Justice) have instigated radical reviews of the welfare state. This article criticises the British social scientific research available to these enquiries. It draws on Bill Jordan's recent (as yet unpublished) ESRC review and synthesis of research on poverty and social exclusion, and his and Marcus Redley's ESRC-funded comparative study of decision-making and moral regulation in households. The authors argue that too little scholarly attention has been given to the divergence between better-off and poor people's practices over work and welfare. This dimension of polarization - the way higher-income couples orientate towards property, occupational and private welfare, and low-income couples towards means-tested benefits, in their employment decisions - has important implications, both for the underclass debate and for the future of the welfare state.
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Paprota, Malgorzata. "Designing the welfare state: Selected building metaphors of the welfare state across the British press." Lublin Studies in Modern Languages and Literature 41, no. 2 (January 2, 2018): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/lsmll.2017.41.2.83.

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Powell, Martin. "The Eureka Moment? The creation of the British Welfare State." Social Work and Social Sciences Review 20, no. 3 (April 2, 2020): 12–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1921/swssr.v20i3.1313.

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This article explores when the welfare state was established in Britain. First it examines the definitions of the welfare state, before turning to outline the methods and criteria used in exploring the establishment of welfare states. It then discusses the criteria that have been applied to the British case (expenditure; legislation; content; social citizenship; antithesis of the Poor Law) before critically analysing the arguments for different creation periods for the British welfare state (Old Poor Law; nineteenth century; Liberal reforms; inter-war period; 1945; later periods). It is concluded that while the strongest case and the greatest number of dimensions suggest 1945, in the words of T H Marshall: ‘we may still be in doubt what was the exact combination of circumstances in Britain in the 1940's which evoked that cry of "Eureka !’
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Peden, George. "NEOLIBERAL ECONOMISTS AND THE BRITISH WELFARE STATE, 1942–1975." Journal of the History of Economic Thought 39, no. 4 (October 4, 2017): 413–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1053837216001085.

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Liberal economists’ attitudes towards the welfare state are examined to see how clearly neoliberalism can be distinguished from other forms of liberalism. Three questions are asked. First, how could Friedrich Hayek believe he could accommodate elements of the welfare state agenda set by William Beveridge and John Maynard Keynes into his thinking? Second, why did Hayek become increasingly critical of the welfare state? Third, how far did Lionel Robbins, John Jewkes, and Alan Peacock agree with him? All three might be regarded as neoliberals according to the litmus test set by Philip Mirowski and Dieter Plehwe: that is, membership of the Mont Pèlerin Society or a think tank associated with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation. Yet, Robbins, Jewkes, and Peacock are on a spectrum between Mirowski’s definition of neoliberalism as a belief that freedom is to be found in the unfettered market, and classical and democratic liberals’ belief that people have to be nurtured to become effective citizens and have to be protected from the market’s disruptive effects. It is suggested that a nuanced approach is required in explaining why liberal economists came to believe the welfare state should make more use of markets and pricing systems for registering preferences and apportioning resources.
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Ferrera, Maurizio. "FROM THE WELFARE STATE TO THE SOCIAL INVESTMENT STATE." Revista Direito das Relações Sociais e Trabalhistas 3, no. 1 (October 9, 2019): 53–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.26843/mestradodireito.v3i1.101.

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This paper discusses the basic rationale which has inspired the intellectual and policy reorientation towards “social investment”, with particular attention to child policy. The firstsection outlines the main features of the social investment approach, contrasting it with the more traditional “Fordist” approach. The second and third sections explain why and how early childhood education and care canmake a difference in termsofbothefficiencyandequity.Thefourthsectionbrieflysummarizes the British experience under New Labour, while the fifth section discusses issues of quality and accessibility. The conclusion wraps up, underlining the need to step up the shift to- wards social investment, overcoming the political obstaclesto reform.
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Taylor-Gooby, Peter. "The Politics of Welfare Privatization: The British Experience." International Journal of Health Services 19, no. 2 (April 1989): 209–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/ngx2-3yk9-crku-p4t3.

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The 1980s Conservative government in Britain is committed to policies of welfare privatization for practical and ideological reasons-to facilitate tax cuts and to roll back the state. One problem this policy faces is that the most expensive and interventionist services are highly popular with voters from all parties. In this article, the author examines the extent to which recent privatization policies in welfare are influenced by conflict between the goals of achieving tax cuts and of maintaining electoral support, so that the outcome is a change in the form of state interventionism, rather than a rolling back of the welfare state. It also considers the impact of new policies designed to undermine the consensus across social groups and political parties of support for big-spending state services, which may facilitate reductions in the overall scope of welfare provision in future years.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "British welfare state"

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Tait, Irvine Wallace. "Voluntarism and the state in British social welfare 1914-1939." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1995. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/5065/.

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The New Right's critique of the welfare state has generated considerable interest in the history of alternative forms of welfare provision. Recent work has focused upon the continued existence of voluntarism alongside the growth of twentieth century state welfare. In doing this, it has reacted against the tendency of post-war social welfare writing to concentrate exclusively on the statutory social services. This thesis, therefore, adds to a growing body of writing on inter-war voluntary social action. However, it differs from the work of others by focusing upon the interplay of voluntary and statutory sectors in the face of war, industrial unrest and mass unemployment: in other words the upheavals of the early twentieth century. The main body of the research not only deals with the part played by both sectors in the delivery of social services, but also places voluntarism in a wider social context by exploring its ideological response to working-class assertiveness. Indeed, the belief in a British national community with interests that transcended class or sectional divisions was a common feature in voluntarism's attitude towards the above challenges and their implications for social stability. Thus, by highlighting the class objectives of the middle-class volunteer, this thesis avoids treating voluntary groups as simply the deliverers of social services in partnership with the state. As middle-class organisations operating within civil society, the charities covered in the pages ahead are placed alongside the state and capital in the defence of the existing economic and social order. Differences may have existed amongst charities over the correct mix in the statutory-voluntary welfare mix, but, as this thesis seeks to prove, this should not blind us to voluntarism's commitment to an over riding class interest.
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Hunt, John Anthony. "The development of pharmaceutical services in the British welfare state." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.266923.

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Ling, T. S. "The management of the British state in the transition from the Keynesian welfare state to Thatcherism." Thesis, University of Essex, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.290992.

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Mitton, Lavinia Clare Elizabeth. "Objectives and outcomes of means testing under the British welfare state." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2004. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1770/.

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The principal objective of this thesis is to determine why, how and with what outcomes means tests for 'non-income-replacement' benefits were adopted in England and Wales from the mid-1960s to the mid-1990s. The approach taken is to explore four benefits: free prescription medicines; free school meals; student grants; and civil legal aid. I use documents to identify the objectives, administrative details and design of the benefits which are the focus of this thesis. The method used to find out how many and what sorts of people were eligible under the means tests is microsimulation with micro-data. There was no high point of generosity in the mid-1970s for these benefits, as the historiography often suggests. These four benefits had very different objectives. There was also incoherence in objectives over time, as governments struggled with spending constraints rather than following a welfare ideology, which serves to undermine theories which assume that welfare states are a unified institution. The changing income levels for entitlement for benefit show that who was deemed to be 'in need' of a particular benefit shifted over time. The results show little support for the theory of middle class 'capture' of the welfare state, which implies that the influence of pressure groups on welfare state change is more subtle than that theory suggests. Although the intention of restricting entitlement for all the benefits was achieved, they were not very well targeted on those with the lowest incomes, especially in the 1990s. This finding shows that the outcome did not meet all the stated objectives, with implications for the design of future policy. I also find that means tested benefits have embodied values, which are not necessarily made explicit as policy objectives. This, along with the failure to target effectively, demonstrates that the way a means testing policy is implemented does matter.
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Aulakh, Sundeep. "The concept and practice of 'enabling' local housing authorities." Thesis, Sheffield Hallam University, 2002. http://shura.shu.ac.uk/19296/.

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This thesis examines the changing role of housing authorities within the wider context of the restructuring of the British welfare state. Between the years 1979 and 1997, four successive Conservative administrations attempted to eliminate the municipal ownership and management of the social housing sector. Central to this restructuring was the notion of 'enabling' and this crystallised the Conservatives' vision for the future role of housing authorities as non-providers. Instead, local authorities were expected to facilitate housing provision through the private or voluntary sectors. At the time this research began, it was clear that, whilst the magnitude of this reorientation of local government's traditional role generated significant discussion at the conceptual level, there remained a paucity of empirical research examining the actual practice of enabling at the local level. The research on which this thesis draws, therefore, helps to address the imbalance between the theorisation of enabling and detailed empirical work. It explores the way in which housing authorities have responded to the enabling challenge and the resultant implications this has for the delivery of housing services. In the UK, the conceptual discussion of enabling was most clearly articulated in the enabling typology developed by Leach et al. (1992) and this formed the theoretical underpinnings of the present study. A two-part research strategy was adopted in which, first, a postal survey was administered to 100 housing authorities. This provided a scientific sampling framework from which three case-study housing authorities were selected for the second part of the data collection. Here, qualitative interviews were undertaken with senior policy-makers from the housing departments and their housing association and voluntary sector 'partners'. There was variation between the three case-study authorities in their transition to the enabling role and, in this context, the prominent research findings are as follows. The analysis of the data gathered from the first case-study authority highlights the way in which resistance to change and institutional inertia prevented the housing department from shifting to the enabling role. Hence, it continued to operate according to the traditional role. In the other two case-study authorities, the research findings show: (a) the variation between central and local government in their interpretation of enabling, particularly in the context of the compulsory competitive tendering of housing management functions; (b) the shift towards partnership working and the way in which the housing authorities retained a dominant role amongst the plethora of agencies that are now involved in policy formation and service delivery; (c) the decline in direct provision was precipitating the 'reinvention' of new roles centred around 'community governance'; (d) the implications that all these developments had in relation to the internal organisational structure and management processes of the two authorities. In examining the practice of enabling housing authorities, this thesis contributes to an understanding of the way in which the wider role and function of local government has been restructured from its position under the post-war consensus.
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Osborne, James Bennett. "Problem families and the welfare state in post-war British literature (1945-75)." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2014. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/375740/.

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This thesis adopts an interdisciplinary approach to consider how so-called ‘problem families’ were conceptualised by the welfare state in post war Britain through an examination of fiction and non-fiction texts. The 1945-75 period has been recognised as the era of the ‘classic welfare state’, during which successive governments made interventions in the British economy to maintain full employment. Preventing wide-scale unemployment was key to classic welfare state ideology, which relied the assumption that workers would make contributions which were equal in value to the benefits they received. Problem families were perceived as either unable or unwilling to participate in this reciprocal relationship due to their failure to achieve or aspire to ‘normal’ levels of productivity and financial independence. In order to gain insight into the manner in which these families were conceptualised by the welfare state, this thesis focuses upon three key areas: psychiatry, housing and family planning. It also draws upon theoretical perspectives offered by Michel Foucault and Zygmunt Bauman to consider how the conceptualisations from each of these served the purposes of state governance and the enforcement of social norms through biopolitical means. Investigating the manner in which the term ‘problem family’ was deployed in the post-war period provides insight into how the welfare state legitimised its attempts to change behaviours closely associated with the poorest members of British society. By shaping policy to encourage the reform of problem family behaviour through biopolitical means, the post-war welfare state played an important governance role by ensuring that as many people as possible existed in a reciprocal relationship with the state.
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Edwards, Sarah Elizabeth. "The significance of social enterprises in the reform of the British welfare state." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2003. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/192763/.

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Increasingly, the United Kingdom Government is looking towards the social economy to deliver welfare services. The social economy, and specifically social enterprises, are envisaged by New Labour as having the ability to train and employ those disadvantaged in the labour market; engage individuals and communities in service provision and urban renewal; and, provide a model for future forms of welfare service provision. This research investigates the links between the social enterprise and the welfare reforms initiated by New Labour. In addition, the research considers the implications of an expanded role for social enterprises in welfare from the perspective of social enterprise practitioners. Using a grounded theory research design, and qualitative research methodologies, those running social enterprises in the cities of London and Bristol were interviewed (during the summer of 2001). This data, alongside policy documents, ministerial speeches, newspaper articles, think tank publications, and interviews with policy-makers and advocates for the social enterprise sector, provide the evidence presented here. The research develops a definition of the social enterprise as an organisation that uses a commercial venture as a tool to achieve social change. It is shown that the term 'social enterprise' refers to a diverse range of organisations that differ in legal and organisational structure and social mission, but which are linked by the common purpose of service delivery. The research reveals a subtle but important difference between social enterprise activity, and social enterprise as a business model. In spite of their diversity, it is demonstrated that a typology of social enterprises can be constructed by using the attributes identified by those running such organisations. This typology takes into account a diverse range of attributes that coalesce to form this hybrid social institution, instead of considering their organisational structure or social mission as defining features, as has been the case in the past. Using discourse analysis, social enterprises are shown to be significant within welfare reform because they embody the attributes that advocates for reform wish to promote. Social enterprises are shown to embody the postmodern attributes of'empowerment' and tailored localised service provision, alongside the politically attractive attributes of'enterprise', 'effectiveness', and 'efficiency'. These attributes offer 'challenges' to existing forms of public and third sector welfare provision. Through these challenges, the discourse of social enterprise is instrumental in current changes in welfare, not only in changing the practices of service delivery, but more significantly, in changing the culture and the way in which 'solutions' in welfare are sought. The thesis demonstrates how the notion of social enterprise is intertwined with broader academic debates concerning the scale and scope of the emerging postmodern welfare state, and the social enterprise is shown to be emblematic of those changes in welfare at a theoretical level. At a practical level, the social enterprise appears to be unlikely to have significant impact on the mainstay of the welfare state. However, it is suggested here that policy-makers need to take greater consideration of the 'appropriateness' of applying the social enterprise model in welfare than is the case at present.
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Wolff, Annabelle. "The British Labour Party and the German Social Democratic Party : changing attitudes towards the welfare state." Thesis, University of Plymouth, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/10100.

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Placing politics in time can greatly enrich our understanding of complex social dynamics. The question this thesis tries to answer is which mechanism led to the change in attitudes of the German Social Democratic Party and the British Labour Party towards the welfare state during the period from 1990 to 2010 and which effects in consequence these changes had on the existing welfare states. This thesis builds on the welfare state categorization work done by the Danish sociologist Gosta Esping-Andersen ("Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism"). However, the thesis focuses its in- depth analysis on Germany and the United Kingdom as prototypical conservative and liberal states. The heuristic text analysis, as well as the discourse analysis of party leader speeches, party manifestos and programmes, as well as the conducted expert interviews reveal that social, political, technological and economic changes during the given time period radically challenged and changed the norms and values of the welfare providers and with it the given welfare state, as well as the meaning, function and value of work. While many may argue that it was mainly the neo-liberal political and economic style that changed the attitude towards the welfare state, it was in fact just the trigger for a radical change in the interpretation of the basic social democratic values of freedom, justice and solidarity. This change made significant welfare state reforms inevitable and only with further changes can a balance and satisfaction within the welfare state system and within all welfare providing sectors (the state, the market, households and the third sector) be achieved. A new balanced social democratic approach for the 21st century is a ‘symmetrical welfare state’ that stands for mirror-image equality.
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Osipovic, D. "Social citizenship of Polish migrants in London : engagement and non-engagement with the British welfare state." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2010. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/20186/.

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This thesis offers an account of how social citizenship is understood and actualised by ordinary citizens engaged in international mobility. It is based on an analysis of in-depth interviews with 62 Polish migrants conducted within their family and/or household context in London in 2007/2008. The interviews explored how participants satisfied their welfare needs in areas of housing, health and securing an adequate standard of living during their stay in Britain, and to what extent the satisfaction of those needs took place via welfare state or alternative institutions. The eligibility constraints of EU and UK policies on the social entitlements of Polish migrants are reflected in statistical data such as the UK Labour Force Survey. Nevertheless the interviews show that engagement and non-engagement with the British welfare state depend considerably on the participants‟ perceptions of their position in British society. The needs, desert and membership logics of engagement and the market, care and indeterminate logics of non-engagement have been identified. For instance, the self-image of a contributing citizen with a strong work ethic underpins the desert-based logic of engagement. In contrast, the self-image of a pure migrant worker attains to the market-based logic of non-engagement. Furthermore this thesis explains interactions that arise in the processes of engagement and non-engagement with London-based welfare state institutions and traces the consequences for the agent. Methodologically, the study follows the principles of the constructivist reworking of grounded theory. The emerging theoretical perspective emplaces agency in the tension between the ideational and actual levels of individualised experience of social reality, and suggests a sequential interplay between structure and agency. By relaying migrants‟ views and practices of social citizenship, the research identifies the non-national foci of solidarity and legitimacy rooted in the norms of conditionality and local citizenship which redefine the boundaries of modern welfare communities.
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White, Gregory. "Policy, protest and power : contemporary perspectives and engagements of post-crisis social movements within the British welfare state." Thesis, University of York, 2017. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/22553/.

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Contemporary social policy in the UK is at a critical impasse: the ongoing government austerity programme has presented an unprecedented challenge to civil society organisations, trade unions and social movements as to questions of social justice and inequality. These challenges have manifested as: (1) tackling entrenched neoliberal narratives surrounding the welfare state; (2) organising and coordinating direct action and a (non-) institutional response. From the perspective of post-crisis social movements (such as Occupy London and UK Uncut), there has been a focus on non-institutional methods - often manifested in the form of direct action - to address social and economic injustices. The efficacy of such decisions to act have been widely researched. However, whilst the interest in researching links between activism and policy outcomes is strong, the lasting impact of such interventions on government policy - and, in particular, social policy - is less well-known. This thesis utilises fieldwork (conducted between 2013 and 2015) in order to better understand the relationship between post-crisis social movements and social policy. The investigation utilises mixed methods, including a deep textual analysis covering a spread of documents from trade union movements, social movements and political parties active in the UK between 2010 and 2015. In addition, it also utilises an analysis of interview data, collected from participants active in the same organisations. It examines institutional and non-institutional forms of activism - deployed in the post-crisis context - and analyses the potential for such activism, in pursuit of understanding how 'outside' voices and fringe political movements can engage with and even influence social policy - but also how they can be dismissed. Further, it will pose questions for social policy scholars as to how social movements can challenge certain policy prescriptions and be effective in both an institutional and non-institutional sphere.
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Books on the topic "British welfare state"

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Altruism and the British welfare state. Aldershot, Hants, England: Avebury, 1996.

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The development of the British welfare state. London: Prentice Hall/Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1996.

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Judge, Ken. The British welfare state in transition: Draft. Canterbury: Personal Social Services Unit, University of Kent, 1985.

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Harris, Bernard. The Origins of the British Welfare State. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-07980-0.

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Fraser, Derek. The Evolution of the British Welfare State. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-03734-3.

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John, Brown. The British welfare state: A critical history. Oxford: Blackwell, 1995.

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Fraser, Derek. The Evolution of the British Welfare State. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-60589-4.

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Banting, Keith G. Diversity, solidarity and the welfare state: International experience and British debates. London: Canadian High Commission, 2004.

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The economic impact of the welfare state and social wage: The British experience. Aldershot, Hants, England: Avebury, 1996.

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Learning from America: Policy transfer and the development of the British workfare state. Portland, Or: Sussex Academic Press, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "British welfare state"

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Cairncross, Frances. "Is the British Welfare System Sustainable?" In Restructuring the Welfare State, 9–20. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-60652-6_2.

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Fraser, Derek. "Education and welfare." In The Evolution of the British Welfare State, 96–119. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-03734-3_5.

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Fraser, Derek. "Education and welfare." In The Evolution of the British Welfare State, 89–112. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-60589-4_5.

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Coxall, Bill, and Lynton Robins. "Social Policy and the Welfare State." In British Politics since the War, 237–56. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26013-3_11.

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Deakin, Nicholas. "The Worm at the Root: An Exploration of the British Welfare Case." In Reforming the Welfare State, 207–30. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-60497-3_11.

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Burden, Tom. "The British Welfare State: Development and Challenges." In Welfare States and the Future, 78–96. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230554917_6.

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Beech, Matt. "The British Welfare State and its Discontents." In The Withering of the Welfare State, 86–100. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230349230_6.

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Finn, D., and B. Schulte. "‘Employment First’: Activating the British Welfare State." In Bringing the Jobless into Work?, 297–343. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-77435-8_8.

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Fraser, Derek. "The Welfare State in Modern Britain." In The Evolution of the British Welfare State, 287–324. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-03734-3_11.

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Fraser, Derek. "The Welfare State in Modern Britain." In The Evolution of the British Welfare State, 269–310. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-60589-4_11.

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