Disciplinary social policy and the failing promise of the new middle classes: the troubled families programme
Journal article
Authors | Tepe-Belfrage, Daniela and Nunn, Alex |
---|---|
Abstract | This article looks at the promise of the ‘New Middle Class’ (NMC) inherent in the neoliberal ideological ideal of individualising societal responsibility for well-being and success. The article points to how this promise enables a discourse and practice of welfare reform and a disciplining of life styles particularly targeting the very poor in society. Women and some ethnic minorities are particularly prone to poverty and then therefore also discipline. The article then provides a case study of the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) and shows how the programme and the way it is constructed and managed partly undermines the provision of the material needs to alleviate people from poverty and re-produces discourses of poor lifestyle and parenting choices as sources of poverty, thereby undermining the ‘middle-class’ promise. |
Keywords | Troubled Families; Social policy; Class; Neoliberalism |
Year | 2016 |
Journal | Social Policy and Society |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
ISSN | 14747464 |
14753073 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1017/S1474746416000452 |
Web address (URL) | http://hdl.handle.net/10545/621170 |
hdl:10545/621170 | |
Publication dates | 17 Oct 2016 |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 15 Dec 2016, 11:22 |
Rights | Archived with thanks to Social Policy and Society |
Contributors | University of Derby and University of Liverpool |
File | File Access Level Open |
File | File Access Level Open |
https://repository.derby.ac.uk/item/95374/disciplinary-social-policy-and-the-failing-promise-of-the-new-middle-classes-the-troubled-families-programme
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