Adding to the shame of poverty: the public, politicians and the media
Abstract
The denigration of people in poverty is not new. It has been evident since at least the dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII when the Tudor state assumed de facto responsibility for the care of ‘paupers’, and the terms ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’ were coined. The words used have changed and the vehemence of the language has ebbed and flowed, but the divisive, self-justifying distinction between the workless, rogues, idlers and scroungers on the one hand and the hardworking, law-abiding, responsible, ‘middle class’, taxpayer has not. Robert Walker and Elaine Chase draw on their recent research to highlight how recent welfare reforms continue our long tradition of shaming people who live in poverty.
Citation
Walker, R. and Chase, E. (2014) Adding to the shame of poverty: the public, politicians and the media. Child Poverty Action Group, Issue 148, pp. 9-13.DOI
10.35648/20.500.12413/11781/ii269More details
http://www.cpag.org.uk/content/adding-shame-poverty-public-politicians-and-mediahttps://doi.org/10.35648/20.500.12413/11781/ii269