1. Post-War Welfare Settlements of the 1980s and 90s
It assumed a society composed of white nuclear families, headed by a wage-earning father with a job for life and a mother at home looking after the children. Consequently in the Beveridgean social welfare settlement the normal citizen was socially constructed as the employed, married, white, able-bodied, insured male worker. This social construction of the normal citizen produced types of "included" people who were the "subjects" imagined by the Beveridgean welfare state. Compared with this norm, others such as women, black people, disabled people and immigrants were marginalised from full ...
- Word Count: 3818
- Approx Pages: 15
- Grade Level: Undergraduate