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Does Covid-19 represent a ‘new Beveridge’ moment, a crisis that will wash away, or a call to action? : report of a roundtable discussion on theories of welfare.

by Burchardt, Tania.London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion (CASE). Social Policies and Distributional Outcomes.
Series: SPDO research note ; 2 (9 June 2020).Publisher: LSE, London : 2020.Description: 14p.Summary: To what extent do developments in the UK welfare state over the last 25 years tend to confirm or challenge existing accounts of welfare state evolution? What does this imply for the prospects for welfare state reform coming out of the Covid crisis? What does the evolution of the (UK) welfare state over the last 25 years, and the influences on it, tell us about its capacity to respond to the current crisis? What challenges will the welfare state have to address after the worst of the public health crisis has passed, and are these new challenges or more dramatic forms of existing challenges? What do the history and theories of welfare state change tell us about the likelihood of the welfare state responding effectively to these new challenges?.Subject(s): public services | welfare state | Covid-19 | pandemics | Covid-19 | future studies | trends | views | United Kingdom
Digital copyAvailability: Online access | Online access | Online access Note: ; Social Policies and Distributional Outcomes in a changing Britain; CASE publications. List(s) this item appears in: Covid-19: health and social care recovery in England [January 2023]
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To what extent do developments in the UK welfare state over the last 25 years tend to confirm or challenge existing accounts of welfare state evolution? What does this imply for the prospects for welfare state reform coming out of the Covid crisis? What does the evolution of the (UK) welfare state over the last 25 years, and the influences on it, tell us about its capacity to respond to the current crisis? What challenges will the welfare state have to address after the worst of the public health crisis has passed, and are these new challenges or more dramatic forms of existing challenges? What do the history and theories of welfare state change tell us about the likelihood of the welfare state responding effectively to these new challenges?

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