(Not) Taking Account of Precarious Employment: Workfare Policies and Lone Mothers in Ontario and the UK |
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Authors: | Patricia M. Evans |
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Affiliation: | School of Social Work at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada |
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Abstract: | Workfare is, at least in part, a policy response to changing labour markets and the expansion taking place in jobs that are low‐paid, irregular and insecure. For lone mothers, increasingly the focus of workfare policies, precarious employment creates special challenges. However, the nature of the jobs that are available to women on social assistance has received relatively little attention in the workfare literature, which focuses more on individual characteristics, supports to employment, and programme impacts. Drawing upon both primary and secondary sources and using Ontario, the province with the most developed workfare programme in Canada, this article examines the ways in which policies support and enforce precarious employment. The article also considers the implications of precarious employment for UK policy, which has not (yet) adopted workfare for lone mothers, although incremental steps in that direction are taking place as employment is increasingly viewed as the appropriate objective of income support programmes for lone mothers. |
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Keywords: | Welfare reform Welfare-to-work policies Non-standard employment Single parents Workfare |
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