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Everyday Welfare in Modern British History : Experience, Expertise and Activism / edited by Caitríona Beaumont, Eve Colpus, Ruth Davidson.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Beaumont, Caitríona.
Contributor:
Colpus, Eve.
Davidson, Ruth.
Series:
Palgrave Studies in the History of Experience, 2524-8979
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Great Britain--History.
Great Britain.
History, Modern.
Social history.
World politics.
Welfare state.
History of Britain and Ireland.
Modern History.
Social History.
Political History.
Welfare.
Local Subjects:
History of Britain and Ireland.
Modern History.
Social History.
Political History.
Welfare.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (382 pages)
Edition:
1st ed. 2025.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2025.
Summary:
“This carefully compiled book has great potential to renew scholarly discussion on the history of welfare in Britain. By focusing on the welfare cultures that flourish outside the established welfare institutions, and on the entanglements between experience, agency, and societal change, it significantly broadens our understanding of the history of British welfare.” — Johanna Annola, Tampere University, Finland "Everyday Welfare provides a rigorously coherent collection of essays that will have a major influence on debates in modern British history and social policy. It resituates ‘experience’ as a central concept of analysis, demonstrating how everyday social and material realities are connected to broader political and policy changes. It reinvigorates established historical concerns and, through a series of empirically rich examples, points the way forward for so much future research." — Matthew Hilton, Queen Mary University of London, UK This open access book offers a new approach to understandings of welfare in modern Britain. Foregrounding the agency individuals and groups claimed through experiential expertise, it traces deep connections between personal experience, welfare, and activism across diverse settings in modern Britain. The experiential experts studied in this collection include women, students, children, women who have sex with women, bereaved families, community groups, individuals living in poverty, adults whose status sits outside professional categories, health service users, and people of faith. Chapters trace how these groups have used their experiences to assert an expert witness status and have sought out new spaces to expand the scope, inclusivity, and applicability of welfare services. Caitríona Beaumont is Professor of Social History at London South Bank University, UK. Eve Colpus is Associate Professor of British and European History post-1850 at the University of Southampton, UK. Ruth Davidson is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Mile End Institute, School of History, Queen Mary University of London, UK.
Contents:
1. Introduction
2. Quaker women in humanitarian and social action: faith, learning, and the authority of experience
3. Communities of Care: Working-class women’s welfare activism, 1920-1970s
4. The “housewife as expert”: re-thinking the experiential expertise and welfare activism of housewives’ associations in England, 1960 -1980
5. Childminders and the limits of mothering as experiential expertise, England c. 1948-2000
6. “Daddy knows best”: professionalism, paternalism, and the state in mid-twentieth century British child diswelfare experiences
7. Fire, Fairs, and Dragonflies: The Writings of “Gifted Children” and Age-Bound Expertise
8. Claiming and curating experiential expertise at the children’s telephone helpline, ChildLine UK, 1986-2006
9. Justifying Experience, Changing Expertise: From protest to authenticity in anglophone “mad voices” in the mid-twentieth century
10. Qualified by virtue of experience? Professional youth work in Britian 1960-1989
11. “Let me tell you how I see it…”: White women, race, and welfare on two Birmingham council estates in the 1980s
12. Student Voices, Expertise, and Welfare within British Universities, 1930s to the 1970s
13. Connecting the disconnected: Telephones, activism, and “faring well” in Britain, 1950-2000
14. Placing Experiential Expertise: The 1981 New Cross massacre campaign
15. “Low risk doesn’t mean no risk”: The making of lesbian safer-sex and the creation of new (s)experts in the late 20th century
16. Afterword.
ISBN:
9783031649875
3031649877

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