Two specific shifts have occurred in the sectoral bases of
welfare provision in the UK since the last war. The first involved in
establishment of collective state provision whilst the second has
involved a significant expansion of owner occupation.
These developments have been interpreted at various times as
signifying substantial changes in the nature of British society,
particularly in the way that they are alleged to have attenuated class
based social divisions and patterns of consciousness. In
contemporary debates, owner occupation is alleged to have generated
a conservative domestic oriented attitudinal disposition among manual
households. Further, such households are held to be profoundly
disaffected from state welfare as a result of their experiences as
clients in this sector.
The Plymouth study, which is reported below, was concerned
with public attitudes to welfare. More specifically, its aim was to
generate a data base which would enable the relative significance of
sectoral patterns of welfare and household class as factors which
influence the pattern of public attitudes to issues in social policy to
be assessed. This aim was implemented by administering a structured
questionnaire to a sample of 150 households in Plymouth.
Subsequent empirical and conceptual analyses generated three
conclusions. First, people are dissatisfied with the experience of
state welfare but it is the distributive impact of welfare which is of
the greatest significance in the calculations of the average household.
Second, sectoral patterns of welfare do influence public perceptions of
issues in social policy, but in a modest and specific way. Third,
household class remains the most significant determinant of access to
welfare, public or private, and because of this, the most significant
influence on the pattern of public attitudes to welfare.
Date of Award | 1990 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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'HOUSEHOLD CLASS. THE STATE AND PUBLIC ATTITUDES TO WELFARE'
Hyde, M. (Author). 1990
Student thesis: PhD