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Returning for a fourth time Returning for a fourth time
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Diverse journeys over time Diverse journeys over time
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Rosie: a sustained welfare-to-work transitioner Rosie: a sustained welfare-to-work transitioner
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James: a precarious welfare-to-work transitioner James: a precarious welfare-to-work transitioner
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Adrian: a long-term claimant Adrian: a long-term claimant
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Experiences of welfare-to-work ‘support’ over time Experiences of welfare-to-work ‘support’ over time
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The persistence of poverty The persistence of poverty
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The long-term costs of welfare reform The long-term costs of welfare reform
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Experiencing and escaping benefits stigma Experiencing and escaping benefits stigma
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Problematising ‘poverty porn’ Problematising ‘poverty porn’
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Seven Diverse trajectories between 2011 and 2016
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Published:April 2017
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Abstract
This chapter provides an update on nine of the participants from the research, who were interviewed for a fourth time in the summer of 2016. These interviews – which stretched the whole research period to five years – provided an opportunity to explore most recent responses to welfare reform, and levels of engagement with paid employment. They reveal diverse trajectories, which all seem to pivot around the central place of employment in individual lives (whether as an aspiration or everyday reality). These various trajectories are explored, and key themes to emerge from the 2016 interviews detailed. These encompass the shortcomings with welfare-to-work support, the persistence of poverty, responses to Poverty Porn and dynamic experiences of benefits stigma.
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