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Space, citizenship and the ‘shadow state’: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow

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Space, citizenship and the ‘shadow state’: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow. / Fyfe, Nicholas; Milligan, Christine.
In: Environment and Planning A, Vol. 35, No. 11, 2003, p. 2069-2086.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Fyfe N, Milligan C. Space, citizenship and the ‘shadow state’: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow. Environment and Planning A. 2003;35(11):2069-2086. doi: 10.1068/a35306

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Fyfe, Nicholas ; Milligan, Christine. / Space, citizenship and the ‘shadow state’: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow. In: Environment and Planning A. 2003 ; Vol. 35, No. 11. pp. 2069-2086.

Bibtex

@article{4c6920cc18f24b86b9d5a4f1f7b878fd,
title = "Space, citizenship and the {\textquoteleft}shadow state{\textquoteright}: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow",
abstract = "Faced with anxieties about meeting welfare needs, and worries about the nature and meaning of citizenship, there is evidence of increasing state-initiated moves to develop the role and responsibilities of voluntary associations. Existing research suggests, however, that there are tensions between the spatial distribution of voluntary resources and welfare needs, and that the relationship between voluntary activity and active citizenship is more complex than is often acknowledged. Focusing on the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow, the authors first examine the uneven distribution of voluntary activity across the city and its relationship to `need'. Although in contrast to previous research this reveals strong representation of voluntary organisations in deprived areas of the city (largely as a result of state funding programmes), important tensions and conflicts remain between where organisations are funded to provide services and the needs of vulnerable populations. In the second part of the paper the relationship between voluntarism and citizenship in Glasgow is examined. Highlighting the existence of a distinction between 'grass-roots' and 'corporatist' voluntary organisations, the authors illustrate the ways in which voluntarism can be associated with both the empowerment and the disempowerment of citizens. In the conclusions it is emphasised that developments in Glasgow resonate with wider concerns about the impact of welfare reform on the voluntary sector.",
keywords = "voluntary sector, shadow state, geography",
author = "Nicholas Fyfe and Christine Milligan",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1068/a35306",
language = "English",
volume = "35",
pages = "2069--2086",
journal = "Environment and Planning A",
issn = "1472-3409",
publisher = "SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Space, citizenship and the ‘shadow state’: Exploring the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow

AU - Fyfe, Nicholas

AU - Milligan, Christine

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Faced with anxieties about meeting welfare needs, and worries about the nature and meaning of citizenship, there is evidence of increasing state-initiated moves to develop the role and responsibilities of voluntary associations. Existing research suggests, however, that there are tensions between the spatial distribution of voluntary resources and welfare needs, and that the relationship between voluntary activity and active citizenship is more complex than is often acknowledged. Focusing on the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow, the authors first examine the uneven distribution of voluntary activity across the city and its relationship to `need'. Although in contrast to previous research this reveals strong representation of voluntary organisations in deprived areas of the city (largely as a result of state funding programmes), important tensions and conflicts remain between where organisations are funded to provide services and the needs of vulnerable populations. In the second part of the paper the relationship between voluntarism and citizenship in Glasgow is examined. Highlighting the existence of a distinction between 'grass-roots' and 'corporatist' voluntary organisations, the authors illustrate the ways in which voluntarism can be associated with both the empowerment and the disempowerment of citizens. In the conclusions it is emphasised that developments in Glasgow resonate with wider concerns about the impact of welfare reform on the voluntary sector.

AB - Faced with anxieties about meeting welfare needs, and worries about the nature and meaning of citizenship, there is evidence of increasing state-initiated moves to develop the role and responsibilities of voluntary associations. Existing research suggests, however, that there are tensions between the spatial distribution of voluntary resources and welfare needs, and that the relationship between voluntary activity and active citizenship is more complex than is often acknowledged. Focusing on the voluntary welfare sector in Glasgow, the authors first examine the uneven distribution of voluntary activity across the city and its relationship to `need'. Although in contrast to previous research this reveals strong representation of voluntary organisations in deprived areas of the city (largely as a result of state funding programmes), important tensions and conflicts remain between where organisations are funded to provide services and the needs of vulnerable populations. In the second part of the paper the relationship between voluntarism and citizenship in Glasgow is examined. Highlighting the existence of a distinction between 'grass-roots' and 'corporatist' voluntary organisations, the authors illustrate the ways in which voluntarism can be associated with both the empowerment and the disempowerment of citizens. In the conclusions it is emphasised that developments in Glasgow resonate with wider concerns about the impact of welfare reform on the voluntary sector.

KW - voluntary sector

KW - shadow state

KW - geography

U2 - 10.1068/a35306

DO - 10.1068/a35306

M3 - Journal article

VL - 35

SP - 2069

EP - 2086

JO - Environment and Planning A

JF - Environment and Planning A

SN - 1472-3409

IS - 11

ER -