Crisis social policy and the resilience of the concept of community

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Abstract

This paper considers the continuing resilience of the notion of community in social policy making and wider political commentary in the contemporary UK. Focusing in particular on the ways in which community is negatively and positively invoked and mobilized in narratives of the 'big' and 'broken' societies, it considers why the notion of community, so popular with the previous New Labour government, continues to enchant the present UK Coalition government and has been given added resonance in the context of the economic crisis and of the 'austerity' measures currently being adopted. The paper argues that placing community at the heart of current welfare provision illuminates a number of tensions in the UK government's policy-making agenda. Informed by a discussion of Liverpool - once one of the big society 'laboratories' - we highlight the contradictions between top-down, depoliticized understandings of community and the types of community engagement and participation that are to be found in poor, disadvantaged communities in particular. Such communities are also where the impact of UK government 'austerity' measures are being most keenly felt. © The Author(s) 2012.

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APA

Hancock, L., Mooney, G., & Neal, S. (2012). Crisis social policy and the resilience of the concept of community. Critical Social Policy, 32(3), 343–364. https://doi.org/10.1177/0261018312444410

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