Welfare Conditionality Dataset, 2015-2017

Dwyer, Peter and Wright, Sharon and Fletcher, Del Roy and Fitzpatrick, Suzanne and Flint, John and Johnsen, Sarah and Scullion, Lisa (2021). Welfare Conditionality Dataset, 2015-2017. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-854898

In the UK the use of conditional welfare arrangements that combine elements of sanction and support which aim to 'correct' the 'problematic' behaviour of certain welfare recipients are now an established part of welfare, housing, criminal justice and immigration systems. A strong mainstream political consensus exists in favour of conditionality, whereby many welfare entitlements are increasingly dependent on citizens first agreeing to meet particular compulsory duties or patterns of approved behaviour. Conditionality is currently embedded in a broad range of policy arenas (including unemployment benefit systems, family intervention projects, street homelessness interventions, social housing, and asylum legislation) and its use is being extended to cover previously exempt groups e.g. lone parents and disability benefit recipients. However, assumptions about the benefits and usefulness of conditionality in changing the behaviour of social welfare recipients remain largely untested.
This project has two key aims. First, to advance understanding about the role of conditionality in promoting and sustaining behaviour change among a diversity of welfare recipients over time. Second, to consider the circumstances in which the use of conditionality may, or may not, be ethically justified. We aim to address gaps in existing knowledge by establishing an original and comprehensive evidence base on the efficacy and ethicality of conditionality across a range of social policy fields and diverse groups of welfare service users.
We will use a range of methods to achieve these aims. Initially, we will review relevant literature, statistical data sources and policy documents. To help inform and critically interrogate our approach, we have secured the involvement of leading international scholars who will participate in a series of expert panel seminars convened in the early stages of the study. We will also conduct 'consultation workshops' with welfare recipients and practitioners to feed into research design (these workshops will be held again towards the end of the study to reflect on emerging findings). Following on from this we will undertake fieldwork with three sets of respondents:
1. semi-structured interviews with 40 'elite' policymakers;
2. 24 focus groups (with 6-10 respondents) with frontline welfare practitioners who implement policy; and
3. repeat qualitative longitudinal interviews with a diverse sample of 400 welfare recipients who are subject to conditionality. Each person will be interviewed three times giving a total of 1200 interviews.
The elite interviews will explore the reasons why policymakers introduce conditional welfare policies and their understandings of how they might promote behavioural change. The focus groups will consider both what frontline practitioners think should happen (ethically) and what they think would/does happen (in practice) when conditionality is implemented. The three rounds of repeat qualitative longitudinal interviews with welfare recipients will provide a meaningful way to examine the transitions, adaptations and coping strategies of individuals subject to conditionality, how these may change over time, and why there may be diverse outcomes for different people.
Fieldwork will take place in a variety of locations in England and Scotland, including the cities of London, Manchester, Salford, Sheffield, Glasgow and Edinburgh. This will allow for a comparative analysis of the interplay between shared social security law and the different policy and legal frameworks on housing, homelessness and criminal justice that exist in England and Scotland. All interviews will be audio recorded and transcribed (with permission). The new data generated will then be analysed to explore commonalities and differences between the perspectives of policymakers, frontline workers and welfare recipients. Findings will be disseminated to policymaker, practitioner, academic and welfare service user audiences.

Data description (abstract)

The project undertook fieldwork with three sets of respondents: semi-structured interviews with 52 key informants/policy stakeholders (not included in archive for anonymity reasons), 27 focus groups with frontline welfare practitioners who implement policy; and repeat qualitative longitudinal interviews with a diverse sample of 481 welfare service users (WSU) who were subject to conditionality.
Each person was invited to interview three times. WSU were sampled to inform 9 different policy areas (ASB / Disability / Ex-Offenders/ Homelessness / Jobseeking / Lone Parents / Migrants / Social Housing / Universal Credit). The fieldwork took place in a range of cities across England and Scotland. For further details about the context and methods of Welfare Conditionality, please see www.welfareconditionality.ac.uk.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Dwyer Peter University of York https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2297-2375
Wright Sharon University of Glasgow https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6312-6052
Fletcher Del Roy Sheffield Hallam University
Fitzpatrick Suzanne Heriot-Watt University
Flint John University of Sheffield
Johnsen Sarah Heriot-Watt University
Scullion Lisa University of Salford
Sponsors: ESRC
Grant reference: ES/K002163/2
Topic classification: Social welfare policy and systems
Housing and land use
Labour and employment
Keywords: SOCIAL WELFARE, WELFARE POLICY, UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS, HOUSING
Project title: Sanctions, support and behaviour change: understanding the role and impact of welfare conditionality
Grant holders: Peter Dwyer, Sharon Wright, Del Roy Fletcher, Suzanne Fitzpatrick, John Flint, Sarah Johnsen, Lisa Scullion
Project dates:
FromTo
1 July 201331 March 2019
Date published: 14 May 2021 13:31
Last modified: 14 May 2021 13:31

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