Underpinned by the idea of the right to a ‘basic minimum’, welfare states are a major feature of many societies. However, the lived experiences of persons seeking and receiving welfare payments can often be overlooked.This book seeks to remedy this omission by honouring lived experience as valuable, insightful and necessary. It draws on qualitative interviews with 19 people receiving various working age welfare payments in Ireland to explore stigma, social reciprocity and the notions of the deserving and undeserving poor, and to analyse welfare conditionality in the Irish context.Breaking new ground, this book offers original research findings which contest and inform policy both within Ireland and beyond.
Joe Whelan is Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work and Social Policy at Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin.
Foreword by Fred PowellIntroduction1. Setting the Stage: The Development of the Irish Welfare State and its Place in the World of Welfare2. Welfare, Marginality and Social Liminality: Life in the Welfare ‘Space’3. The Effect of the Work Ethic4. Welfare Conditionality5. Maintaining Compliance and Engaging in Impression Management6. Deservingness: Othering, Self-Justification and the Norm of Reciprocity7. Welfare is 'Bad' Bringing It All Together8. COVID-19: Policy Responses and Lived ExperiencesConclusion