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Devolution and social citizenship in the UK

Autor Scott L. Greer
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 ian 2009
Most of the expansive literature on social citizenship follows its leading thinker, T. H. Marshall, and talks only about the British state, often referring only to England. But social citizenship rights require taxation, spending, effective public services and politics committed to them. They can only be as strong as politics makes them. That means that the distinctive territorial politics of the UK are reshaping citizenship rights as they reshape policies, obligations and finance across the UK. This timely book explores how changing territorial politics are impacting on social citizenship rights across the UK. The contributors contend that whilst territorial politics have always been major influences in the meaning and scope of social citizenship rights, devolved politics are now increasingly producing different social citizenship rights in different parts of the UK. Moreover, they are doing it in ways that few scholars or policymakers expect or can trace. Drawing on extensive research over the last 10 years, the book brings together leading scholars of devolution and citizenship to chart the connection between the politics of devolution and the meaning of social citizenship in the UK. The first part of the book connects the large, and largely distinct, literatures on citizenship, devolution and the welfare state. The empirical second part identifies the different issues that will shape the future territorial politics of citizenship in the UK: intergovernmental relations and finance; policy divergence; bureaucratic politics; public opinion; and the European Union. It will be welcomed by academics and students in social policy, public policy, citizenship studies, politics and political science.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781847420350
ISBN-10: 1847420354
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bristol University Press

Recenzii

The combination of a critical engagement with T.H. Marshall's work alongside a contemporary discussion of devolution make this book a valuable and important addition to the citizenship literature. Highly recommended. Peter Dwyer, The Graduate School, BLSS (Business, Law and Social Sciences), Nottingham Trent University

Morgan's testimonial in reviews

The feverish nature of the devolution debate in the UK means that it rarely gets beyond the ideological realm of claim and counter-claim, a process that generates more heat than light. Occasionally a book comes along that sheds some genuine light on the underlying issues, and this is undoubtedly one of them. Kevin Morgan, Professor of Governance and Development, School of City and Regional Planning, Cardiff University

This book is a very useful exploration of the inter-relationship between territorial politics and social policy in the UK, which illuminates both in the process. Marcus Longley, Journal of Social Policy

Notă biografică

Scott L. Greer teaches Health Policy and Management at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, and is also Senior Research Fellow at LSE Health.

Cuprins

Introduction: devolution and citizenship rights ~ Scott L. Greer and Margitta Maetzke

Part one
Equality and Marshallian citizenship: why E does not equal MC ~ Martin Powell
Citizenship in space and time: observations on T.H. Marshall's Citizenship and social class ~ Daniel Wincott
Social citizenship and the question of gender: the suitability and possibilities of a Marshallian framework ~ Richenda Gambles and Adam Whitworth

Part two
Devolution, public attitudes and social citizenship ~ Charlie Jeffery
Social citizenship, devolution and policy divergence ~ Michael Keating
Un-joined-up government: intergovernmental relations and citizenship rights ~ Alan Trench
Social citizenship and intergovernmental finance ~ Iain McLean, Guy Lodge and Katie Schmuecker
How uniform are uniform services? Towards a geography of citizenship ~ Martin Powell
Ever closer union: devolution, the European Union, and social citizenship rights ~ Scott L. Greer