Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Introduction: The dual tracks of welfare and activation reform – Governance and conditionality Cover

Introduction: The dual tracks of welfare and activation reform – Governance and conditionality

Open Access
|May 2021

References

  1. Boland, T., & Griffin, R. (2015a). The death of unemployment and the birth of job-seeking in welfare policy: Governing a liminal experience 1. Irish Journal of Sociology, 23 (2), 29–48.10.7227/IJS.23.2.3
  2. Boland, T., & Griffin, R. (2015b). The sociology of unemployment. Manchester: Manchester University Press.10.7228/manchester/9780719097904.001.0001
  3. Boland, T., & Griffin, R. (2016). The impact of sanctions: Evidence from international research & WUERC primary research. Waterford: Waterford Institute of Technology.
  4. Bonoli, G. (2010). The political economy of active labor-market policy. Politics & Society, 38 (4), 435–57.10.1177/0032329210381235
  5. Boyle, R. (2014). The state of policy evaluation in Ireland. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration.
  6. Brodkin, E. Z. (2013a). Street-level organisations and the welfare state. In E. Z. Brodkin & G. Marston (Eds), Work and the welfare state: Street-level organisations and workfare politics (pp. 17–36). Copenhagen: Djof.10.4324/9781315694474-3
  7. Brodkin, E. Z. (2013b). Work and the welfare state. In E. Z. Brodkin & G. Marston (Eds), Work and the welfare state: Street-level organisations and workfare politics (pp. 3–16). Copenhagen: Djof.
  8. Carter, E., & Whitworth, A. (2015). Creaming and parking in quasi-marketised welfare-to-work schemes: Designed out of or designed into the UK Work Programme? Journal of Social Policy, 44 (2), 277–96.10.1017/S0047279414000841
  9. Central Statistics Office. (2021). Monthly unemployment: March 2021. Retrieved from https://www.cso.ie/en/statistics/labourmarket/monthlyunemployment/ [1 April 2021].
  10. Collins, M., & Murphy, M. P. (2016). Activation: Solving unemployment or supporting a low-pay economy? In M. P. Murphy & F. Dukelow (Eds), The Irish welfare state in the twenty-first century: Challenges and change. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  11. Cousins, M. (2019). Welfare conditionality in the Republic of Ireland after the Great Recession. Journal of Social Security Law, 26 (1), 30–41.
  12. Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection. (2019). Evaluation of JobPath outcomes for Q1 2016 participants. Dublin: Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection.
  13. Dukelow, F. (2015). ‘Pushing against an open door’: Reinforcing the neo-liberal policy paradigm in Ireland and the impact of EU intrusion. Comparative European Politics, 13 (1), 93–111.10.1057/cep.2014.43
  14. Dukelow, F., & Considine, M. (2014a). Between retrenchment and recalibration: The impact of austerity on the Irish social protection system. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 41 (1), 55.
  15. Dukelow, F., & Considine, M. (2014b). Outlier or model of austerity in Europe? The case of Irish social protection reform. Social Policy & Administration, 48 (4), 413–29.10.1111/spol.12068
  16. Gaffney, S., & Millar, M. (2020). Rational skivers or desperate strivers? The problematisation of fraud in the Irish social protection system. Critical Social Policy, 40 (1), 69–88.10.1177/0261018319834819
  17. Government of Ireland. (2012). Pathways to work 2012–16. Dublin: Government of Ireland.
  18. Government of Ireland. (2016). Pathways to work 2016–20. Dublin: Government of Ireland.
  19. Grubb, D., Singh, S., & Tergeist, P. (2009). Activation policies in Ireland. Paris: OECD.
  20. Hick, R. (2018). Enter the troika: The politics of social security during Ireland’s bailout. Journal of Social Policy, 47 (1), 1–20.10.1017/S0047279417000095
  21. Indecon. (2018). Indecon review of local employment services. Dublin: Indecon.
  22. Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed. (2014). Employment Services Research Project: Mapping the journey for unemployed people, phase one. Dublin: Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed.
  23. Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed. (2016). Employment Services Research Project: Mapping the journey for unemployed people, phase two. Dublin: Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed.
  24. Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed. (2019). Employment Services Research Project: Mapping the journey for unemployed people, phase three. Dublin: Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed.
  25. Johnston, H., & McGauran, A.-M. (2018). Low work intensity households and the quality of supportive services: Detailed research report. Dublin: National Economic and Social Council.
  26. Kelly, E., McGuinness, S., Redmond, P., Savage, M., & Walsh, J. R. (2019) An initial evaluation of the effectiveness of the Intreo activation reforms. Dublin: Economic and Social Research Institute.10.26504/rs81
  27. Köppe, S., & MacCarthaigh, M. (2019). Public service integration in hard times: Merging unemployment benefit and labour market activation measures. Administration, 67 (2), 137–60.10.2478/admin-2019-0017
  28. Labour Market Advisory Council. (2020) Preparing for economic recovery. Dublin: Labour Market Advisory Council.
  29. Martin, J. P. (2015). Activation and active labour market policies in OECD countries: Stylised facts and evidence on their effectiveness. IZA Journal of Labor Policy, 4 (4).10.1186/s40173-015-0032-y
  30. McCashin, A. (2018). Continuity and change in the welfare state: Social security in the Republic of Ireland. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  31. McGuinness, S., O’Connell, P. J., & Kelly, E. (2011). Carrots without sticks: The impacts of job search assistance in a regime with minimal monitoring and sanctions. Dublin: Economic and Social Research Institute.
  32. Millar, M., & Crosse, R. (2018). Lone parent activation in Ireland: Putting the cart before the horses? Social Policy & Administration, 52 (1), 111–29.10.1111/spol.12296
  33. Murphy, M. P. (2018). Ode to an invisible woman: The story of qualified adults and partners in Ireland. Irish Journal of Sociology, 26 (1), 25–45.10.1177/0791603516629088
  34. Murphy, M. P., & Hearne, R. (2019). Implementing marketisation: Comparing Irish activation and social housing. Irish Political Studies, 34 (3), 444–63.10.1080/07907184.2019.1583215
  35. National Economic and Social Council. (2020) The future of the Irish social welfare system: Participation and protection. Dublin: National Economic and Social Council.
  36. Newman, J. (2007). The ‘double dynamics’ of activation: Institutions, citizens and the remaking of welfare governance. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 27 (9/10), 364–75.10.1108/01443330710822066
  37. O’Connell, P. J., McGuinness, S., Kelly, E., & Walsh, J. R. (2009). National profiling of the unemployed in Ireland. Dublin: Economic and Social Research Institute.
  38. Rice, D. (2013). Street-level bureaucrats and the welfare state: Toward a micro-institutionalist theory of policy implementation. Administration & Society, 45 (9), 1038–62.10.1177/0095399712451895
  39. Soss, J., Fording, R., & Schram, S. (2013). Performance management as a disciplinary regime: Street-level organizations in a neoliberal era of poverty governance. In E. Z. Brodkin & G. Marston (Eds), Work and the welfare state: Street-level organisations and workfare politics (pp. 125–42). Copenhagen: Djof.
  40. van Berkel, R., & van der Aa, P. (2005). The marketization of activation services: A modern panacea? Some lessons from the Dutch experience. Journal of European Social Policy, 15 (4), 329–43.10.1177/0958928705057264
  41. Whelan, J. (2021a). We have our dignity, yeah? Scrutiny under suspicion: Experiences of welfare conditionality in the Irish social protection system. Social Policy and Administration, 55 (1), 34–50.10.1111/spol.12610
  42. Whelan, J. (2021b). Work and thrive or claim and skive: Experiencing the ‘toxic symbiosis’ of worklessness and welfare recipiency in Ireland. Irish Journal of Sociology, 29 (1), 3–31.10.1177/0791603520957203
  43. Wiggan, J. (2015). What variety of employment service quasi-market? Ireland’s JobPath as a private power market. Social Policy Review, 27, 151–65.
  44. Zacka, B. (2017). When the state meets the street: Public service and moral agency. Cambridge, MA.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.10.4159/9780674981423
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/admin-2021-0011 | Journal eISSN: 2449-9471 | Journal ISSN: 0001-8325
Language: English
Page range: 1 - 16
Published on: May 12, 2021
Published by: The Institute of Public Administration of Ireland
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2021 Michael McGann, Mary P. Murphy, published by The Institute of Public Administration of Ireland
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.