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Monday 30 April 2012 Social policy and the welfare state
Ken McLaughlin
We don’t want to be ‘empowered’, thanks
The fad for empowerment in social work and politics is really about making people comply with state diktat.

Monday 26 March 2012
Ceri Dingle
‘People don’t just want to watch Jeremy Kyle
A WORLDbytes film crew found Londoners in a supposed far-right stronghold took an intelligent approach to welfare.

Tuesday 1 November 2011
Dave Clements
Why feel charitable towards charities?
Charities in the UK have become far too dependent on state funding, at the cost of their independence.

Wednesday 27 July 2011
Patrick Hayes
From working class to incapacitated class
How radical activists shifted from viewing the working classes as powerful to pitying them as pathetic.

Monday 26 July 2010
David Clements
A Big Society with small ambitions
The jury is out on whether David Cameron’s flagship initiative will really reduce the role of the state in our lives.

Tuesday 22 June 2010
Jennie Bristow
Sure Start: a fancy new way to police the family
Sure Start’s main achievement has been to transform the social problem of child poverty into an individual problem of poor parenting.

Wednesday 5 May 2010
Dr Michael Fitzpatrick
Public health and the obsession with behaviour
ESSAY: Recent thinking on health policy has been driven by two myths: that bad health is caused by bad habits, and that government can promote good health by changing our behaviour.

Wednesday 28 April 2010
Jennie Bristow
Turning parents into ‘partners of the state’
ELECTION ESSAY: Thanks to New Labour, the family is no longer seen as a haven in a heartless world, but as a site of all sorts of abuse.

Wednesday 21 April 2010
James Panton
What’s so great about the welfare state?
ESSAY: The origins of state welfare were far from progressive, and in its new therapeutic form it is actually a barrier to human solidarity.

Tuesday 23 March 2010
Brendan O’Neill
Turning immigration into a tool of social engineering
ELECTION ESSAY: The elite now expresses its snobbery and authoritarianism by being ‘pro-immigration’ rather than anti-immigration.

Tuesday 16 March 2010
Frank Furedi
Education: you can’t buy and sell intellectual capital
ELECTION ESSAY: Frank Furedi explains why the mighty mess Labour made of education won’t be fixed by privatisation or parental pressure.

Thursday 19 November 2009
David Clements
Welfare: how help becomes a hindrance
With the shift of emphasis from welfare to wellbeing, the state reinforces the sense that we are unable to cope with life.

Thursday 27 August 2009
Neil Davenport
You say underclass, we say white trash
Chris Grayling’s comparison of Moss Side with The Wire was silly, but his critics have vilified the working class, too.

Tuesday 21 July 2009
Tim Black
Scanning hoodies’ brains: eugenics by the back door?
Is children’s charity Kids Company really planning to send a mobile scanner to examine tearaways’ brains? Yes and no, says the charity’s founder.

Friday 29 May 2009
Nathalie Rothschild
A welfare state of mind
Andrew Brown’s Orwell Prize-winning book about fishing in Sweden casts slivers of light on how Sweden has changed and why its welfare state model is not something to emulate.

Wednesday 25 March 2009
Nathalie Rothschild
The war between rights and responsibilities
Jack Straw’s new bill of rights is nothing like the Magna Carta: it would erode rather than enhance our liberty.



The May issue of spiked plus is now live, featuring spiked’s take on SYRIZA, why the ‘star’ of the Leveson Inquiry, Robert Jay, is no hero, plus Q&A with Claire Fox. Read all this and more here.

 


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23 May 2012
It’s time to get serious
about opposing the EU

15 May 2012
A respectable riot against tabloid readers
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22 May 2012:
The Dictator: satirising America


18 May 2012:
It’s not too late
to cross The Bridge