The Inclusive Society?: Social Exclusion and New LabourSpringer, 24 nov 1998 - 223 pagina's A topical critical examination of the idea of social exclusion and the new political language of social cohesion, community, stakeholding and inclusion. The Inclusive Society? examines the actions and rhetoric of the Labour Party and Labour Government under Tony Blair's leadership. It identifies three different discourses of social exclusion. Using this model, it explores views of inclusion put forward by Will Hutton and other stakeholders, by communitarians including Etzioni and Gray, and by the Labour Party from the Borrie and the Commission on Social Justice to Blair and the Social Exclusion Unit. |
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 1 |
1 Three Discourses of Social Exclusion | 7 |
2 From Social Justice to Social Cohesion | 29 |
3 The Optimism of Will | 49 |
4 Staking Claims | 70 |
5 Community Rules | 89 |
6 New Labour New Discourse | 112 |
7 From Equality to Inclusion | 128 |
8 Delivering Social Inclusion | 159 |
9 The New Durkheimian Hegemony | 178 |
Appendix | 190 |
Notes | 192 |
211 | |
216 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The Inclusive Society?: Social Exclusion and New Labour Ruth Levitas Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2004 |
The Inclusive Society?: Social Exclusion and New Labour Ruth Levitas Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2005 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
activity agenda argued argument behaviour Blair Britain capitalism cent central citizenship claims Clause IV commitment communitarian concern conflict conscience collective corporatism crime CSJ op cit cultural David Marquand Demos dependency discourse Durkheim economic emphasis employability employers equality Etzioni Fabian Society Gail Hebson gender Gray groups Guardian Harriet Harman Hutton Ibid implies inclusive society income increased individual inequality insecurity institutions interests IPPR Jack Straw labour market Labour Party levels London lone parents Macmurray Mandelson and Liddle means moral Mulgan opportunity participation Patricia Hewitt pensions political inclusion poor potential poverty problem question radical redistribution reduce relationships responsibility sector shareholders SID and MUD sion skills social cohesion social democracy social exclusion Social Exclusion Unit social integration Social Justice social security solidarity stake stakeholding structural trade unions underclass unemployed unpaid values voluntary wealth welfare women workers workfare