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From the social fund to local welfare assistance: central-local government relations and 'special expenses'

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From the social fund to local welfare assistance: central-local government relations and 'special expenses'. / Grover, Chris.
In: Public Policy and Administration, Vol. 29, No. 4, 01.10.2014, p. 313-330.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Grover C. From the social fund to local welfare assistance: central-local government relations and 'special expenses'. Public Policy and Administration. 2014 Oct 1;29(4):313-330. Epub 2014 Apr 15. doi: 10.1177/0952076714529140

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Bibtex

@article{87ac580957354ad190b4cab01041bd89,
title = "From the social fund to local welfare assistance: central-local government relations and 'special expenses'",
abstract = "In Britain since the 1930s social assistance recipients have in certain circumstances been able to claim {\textquoteleft}exceptional expenses{\textquoteright} in addition to their weekly benefit income. From the 1940s these were administered by its central government. However, in April 2013 the then incarnation of such payments (the discretionary Social Fund) was partly replaced by locally administered Local Welfare Assistance. Drawing upon material held in files at Britain's National Archives and central government documents framing the development of Local Welfare Assistance, this paper examines how concerns raised in the 1980s meant it was not possible to then transfer responsibility for {\textquoteleft}exceptional expenses{\textquoteright} from central to local government. The paper explores those concerns and how in contemporary Britain they are no longer deemed to be problematic because of the Coalition government's emphasis upon localism and because of changing local government views on the possibility of delivering a mainstream social assistance function.",
keywords = "Central government, poverty, special expenses, local government, social security, poor relief",
author = "Chris Grover",
year = "2014",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/0952076714529140",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "313--330",
journal = "Public Policy and Administration",
issn = "0952-0767",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - From the social fund to local welfare assistance

T2 - central-local government relations and 'special expenses'

AU - Grover, Chris

PY - 2014/10/1

Y1 - 2014/10/1

N2 - In Britain since the 1930s social assistance recipients have in certain circumstances been able to claim ‘exceptional expenses’ in addition to their weekly benefit income. From the 1940s these were administered by its central government. However, in April 2013 the then incarnation of such payments (the discretionary Social Fund) was partly replaced by locally administered Local Welfare Assistance. Drawing upon material held in files at Britain's National Archives and central government documents framing the development of Local Welfare Assistance, this paper examines how concerns raised in the 1980s meant it was not possible to then transfer responsibility for ‘exceptional expenses’ from central to local government. The paper explores those concerns and how in contemporary Britain they are no longer deemed to be problematic because of the Coalition government's emphasis upon localism and because of changing local government views on the possibility of delivering a mainstream social assistance function.

AB - In Britain since the 1930s social assistance recipients have in certain circumstances been able to claim ‘exceptional expenses’ in addition to their weekly benefit income. From the 1940s these were administered by its central government. However, in April 2013 the then incarnation of such payments (the discretionary Social Fund) was partly replaced by locally administered Local Welfare Assistance. Drawing upon material held in files at Britain's National Archives and central government documents framing the development of Local Welfare Assistance, this paper examines how concerns raised in the 1980s meant it was not possible to then transfer responsibility for ‘exceptional expenses’ from central to local government. The paper explores those concerns and how in contemporary Britain they are no longer deemed to be problematic because of the Coalition government's emphasis upon localism and because of changing local government views on the possibility of delivering a mainstream social assistance function.

KW - Central government

KW - poverty

KW - special expenses

KW - local government

KW - social security

KW - poor relief

U2 - 10.1177/0952076714529140

DO - 10.1177/0952076714529140

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 313

EP - 330

JO - Public Policy and Administration

JF - Public Policy and Administration

SN - 0952-0767

IS - 4

ER -