Stereotypes, conditions and binaries: Analysing processes of social disqualification towards children and parents living in precarity

Author:

Jacquet Nicolas12,Van Haute Dorien2,Schiettecat Tineke2,Roets Griet2

Affiliation:

1. Centre de Recherches et d’Interventions Sociologiques, Faculté des Sciences Sociales, Université de Liège, 4000 Liège, Belgium

2. Department of Social Work and Social Pedagogy, Ghent University, 2 9000 Ghent, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract In contemporary European welfare states, poverty reduction strategies can currently be characterised as individualistic rather than solidaristic, focusing on welfare recipients’ merit rather than securing their rights. Based on the findings of a recent research project in Belgium, we explore how social workers develop strategies to combat child poverty in local municipalities. Inspired by the work of the critical French scholars Robert Castel and Serge Paugam, our qualitative analysis reveals how social workers construct stereotypes, conditions and binaries between ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’ poor in their everyday practice. Our results elucidate how social workers strengthen processes of social disqualification when they support children and sanction parents living in poverty. Interestingly, our analysis also shows how social work takes a critical stance in relation to the recent shifts in the normative value orientation of social policy and social work.

Funder

Special Research Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health (social science)

Reference42 articles.

1. Child poverty policies across Europe;Bradshaw;Journal of Family Research,2009

2. Au-delà du salariat ou en deçà de l’emploi ? L’institutionnalisation du précariat’, in Paugam, S. (ed.), Repenser la Solidarité:;Castel;L’apport Des Sciences Sociale,2011

3. Social Rights and Human Welfare

4. Creeping conditionality in the UK: From welfare rights to conditional entitlements?;Dwyer;The Canadian Journal of Sociology,2004

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