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From: *Daniel Edmiston* <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Friday, 4 May 2018
Subject: SPA Workshop Series on Rethinking the Social Divisions of Welfare
To: [log in to unmask]


*Rethinking the Social Divisions of Welfare*
*Implications for Intersectional Inequalities and Redistributive Justice*

The School of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Leeds is
pleased to announce a workshop series supported by the UK Social Policy
Association <http://www.social-policy.org.uk> to explore the lasting and
changing significance of Richard Titmuss’s work for understanding social
divisions of welfare, intersectional inequality and social interdependency.

Sixty years ago, Richard Titmuss published ‘Essays on the Welfare State’ -
a seminal resource underlining the moral and functional legitimacy of
social interdependency between citizens. Titmuss (1958) sought to expand
and re-vision public understandings of ‘welfare’ to highlight fiscal
and occupational fields of state assistance that run alongside public
social transfers and services. In doing so, Titmuss challenged the notion
that ‘welfare’ is the reserve of the working class by outlining what the
middle and upper classes receive through state subsidy and support. Sixty
years on, developments in UK social policy demonstrate the on-going
relevance of Titmuss’s work. Equally however, there is a need to re-think
the social divisions of welfare thesis and its application to the present
context (Mann, 2009). Doing so makes it possible to explore more expansive
questions concerning redistributive justice that relate to:

• the regressive potential of ‘public’ welfare and its bearing on
intersectional inequalities;
• the role of corporate welfare in consolidating (and obscuring) social
divisions of ‘work’ and welfare; and
• social interdependency between citizens and the civic subjectivity of
‘losers’ and ‘winners’ in welfare politics.

To consider these questions and the issues surrounding them, the School of
Sociology and Social Policy <http://www.sociology.leeds.ac.uk> will
be organising three half-day workshops of presentations and debate between
invited speakers and delegates. Each workshop will close with a panel
discussion to consider key lessons identified surrounding the relationship
between vertical and horizontal inequalities and what role welfare politics
and intervention can and should play in the governance of their abatement.

*Workshop 1: Regressive ‘Public’ Welfare: Implications for Intersecting
Inequalities*

Since 2010, administrative shifts in entitlement have undermined the
redistributive functions of the tax-benefit system in the UK. Social
policy analysis has tended to explore how these shifts affect material and
symbolic inequalities across a) the income distribution or b)
social groupings. However, less attention has been given to their effects
on the relationship between vertical inequalities of resource and
horizontal inequalities of social difference. Where a more
multi-dimensional consideration of the distributional effects of social
policy has been undertaken, great insight is possible about the changing
status and relationship between vertical and horizontal inequalities that
are produced and sometimes sustained through welfare intervention and
recalibration (e.g. Hall et al, 2017). This event will explore these issues
and pose a number of empirical and normative questions about the
distributional role of social policy in light of entrenched intersectional
inequalities. This event will extend consideration of the regressive
potential of welfare intervention and how this interacts with categories of
social difference such as gender, race and ethnicity, disability and age.

This event will be held on 14th June 2018. For further details and to book
a place, please click here
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/regressive-public-welfare-implications-for-intersecting-inequalities-tickets-45765247086>
.

*Workshop 2: Corporate Welfare: Consolidating & Obscuring Social Divisions
in ‘Work’?*

Having considered the regressive potential of ‘public’ welfare and its
implications for intersecting inequalities, this event will seek
to broaden out understandings of ‘welfare’ to include and consider
the ‘corporate’. Whilst Titmuss (1958, 1976) acknowledged that private
sector organisations indirectly benefit from state subsidy and support
through occupational and fiscal welfare, there has been less attention
given to the different forms of corporate welfare directly received by
private sector organisations. Recent research into the scale and extent of
state reliefs, transfers and in-kind assistance received by and through
businesses highlights the need to expand the social divisions of
welfare framework in order to address questions concerning redistributive
justice (e.g. Farnsworth, 2013). This includes questions about
the ‘beneficiaries’ of corporate welfare and the role of the market economy
in delivering ‘benefits’ to all workers. In this respect, this event
will consider the role of corporate welfare in consolidating (and
obscuring) social divisions of work and welfare and the inequalities that
are accommodated therein.

This event will be held in October 2018. Further details will be available
soon.

*Workshop 3: Public Understandings of Inequality & Civic Subjectivity in
Welfare Politics*

This event will explore the relative merits of attending to subjective
perceptions of social position amidst economic restructuring
and the explanatory fruits this offers for understanding the role of
welfare politics in the social reproduction of inequalities and
difference. Consideration will also be given to public perceptions of
inequality, the moral and explanatory frameworks that underpin public
attitudes and the policy preferences deemed appropriate and possible as a
result. Titmuss’s (1958) original intention was to underline the role of
social interdependency between all citizens. Beyond public understandings
of welfare and inequality, delegates will explore how this
interdependency might be deployed in ways that make it possible to mobilise
civic subjectivity in attempts to move towards redistributive justice. This
will involve theoretical and empirical examination of the civic
subjectivity of political agents and what bearing shifts in welfare
politics have on the collective (dis-) identification of citizens and the
constrained possibilities this presents.

This event will be held in December 2018. Further details will be available
soon.

***

If you have any questions concerning accessibility, please contact Daniel
Edmiston ([log in to unmask]) or Adam Formby ([log in to unmask]).



-- 

Best wishes,
Dyi

Dieuwertje Dyi Huijg
[log in to unmask]
http://manchester.academia.edu/DieuwertjeDyiHuijg

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