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The cycle of deprivation and the concept of the underclass.

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The cycle of deprivation and the concept of the underclass. / Welshman, John.
In: Benefits, Vol. 10, No. 3, 10.2002, p. 199-205.

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Welshman, John. / The cycle of deprivation and the concept of the underclass. In: Benefits. 2002 ; Vol. 10, No. 3. pp. 199-205.

Bibtex

@article{b6c95f24e0c04e85ad61d0feb2fedeb0,
title = "The cycle of deprivation and the concept of the underclass.",
abstract = "In drawing on the concept of social exclusion, New Labour has been keen to distance itself from the longer-term 'underclass' discourse. At the same time, phrases such as 'cycle of deprivation' and 'problem families' are used with little sense of their earlier history. This article examines Sir Keith Joseph's theory of the 'cycle of deprivation' with regard to the longer-term history of the idea of an underclass. It argues that the cycle of deprivation can be seen as a chronological stepping-stone between related ideas. Nevertheless there are also important differences between the problem family, cycle of deprivation, and underclass formulations.",
author = "John Welshman",
year = "2002",
month = oct,
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "199--205",
journal = "Benefits",
issn = "0962-7898",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The cycle of deprivation and the concept of the underclass.

AU - Welshman, John

PY - 2002/10

Y1 - 2002/10

N2 - In drawing on the concept of social exclusion, New Labour has been keen to distance itself from the longer-term 'underclass' discourse. At the same time, phrases such as 'cycle of deprivation' and 'problem families' are used with little sense of their earlier history. This article examines Sir Keith Joseph's theory of the 'cycle of deprivation' with regard to the longer-term history of the idea of an underclass. It argues that the cycle of deprivation can be seen as a chronological stepping-stone between related ideas. Nevertheless there are also important differences between the problem family, cycle of deprivation, and underclass formulations.

AB - In drawing on the concept of social exclusion, New Labour has been keen to distance itself from the longer-term 'underclass' discourse. At the same time, phrases such as 'cycle of deprivation' and 'problem families' are used with little sense of their earlier history. This article examines Sir Keith Joseph's theory of the 'cycle of deprivation' with regard to the longer-term history of the idea of an underclass. It argues that the cycle of deprivation can be seen as a chronological stepping-stone between related ideas. Nevertheless there are also important differences between the problem family, cycle of deprivation, and underclass formulations.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 199

EP - 205

JO - Benefits

JF - Benefits

SN - 0962-7898

IS - 3

ER -