2016
DOI: 10.1080/00071005.2016.1171823
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Education, Welfare Reform and Psychological Well-Being: A Critical Psychology Perspective

Abstract: There are established links between education and well-being, and between poverty and education. This article draws on interviews with parents of school-aged children impacted by a policy in the UK commonly referred to as the 'bedroom tax'. A critical psychology perspective to education is put forward, acknowledging the complex interrelationships between psychological well-being, sociopolitical factors and education.

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Although it is difficult to untangle the impact of specific policies (e.g., welfare, housing, educational) and policy‐related events (the vote to leave the EU), the participants were very clear that the broader socio‐political context was having an impact upon their work. As reflected in earlier work, a wide interpretation of emotional well‐being was held (Bragg et al ., ; Winter et al ., ) and the interviewees reported having to attend to pupils’ basic human needs. In justifying this, one teacher linked this directly to the humanistic psychological theory by referring to Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs (Maslow, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Although it is difficult to untangle the impact of specific policies (e.g., welfare, housing, educational) and policy‐related events (the vote to leave the EU), the participants were very clear that the broader socio‐political context was having an impact upon their work. As reflected in earlier work, a wide interpretation of emotional well‐being was held (Bragg et al ., ; Winter et al ., ) and the interviewees reported having to attend to pupils’ basic human needs. In justifying this, one teacher linked this directly to the humanistic psychological theory by referring to Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs (Maslow, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Changes, such as those noted above, impact greatly upon peoples' lives and the impact of poverty and inequality upon mental health is well documented (Allen, Balfour, Bell, & Marmot, 2014;WHO, 2014). These policy changes have had a direct impact upon educational practices (e.g., Jones, 2015;Simmie, Moles, & O'Grady, 2016), and specific changes such as the removal of the spare room subsidy (colloquially known as the 'bedroom tax') have led to explicit changes in pastoral support structures (Bragg et al, 2015;Winter, Burman, Hanley, Kalambouka, & Mccoy, 2016). In this latter project, school staff and community workers reported encountering increases in poverty, new challenges related to hunger within schools, and the perception of increased mental health needs.…”
Section: Humanistic Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Liddell and Guiney () show a relationship between living in a cold, damp household and problems with mental health issues, while Purdam, Garrett, and Esmail () describe a relationship between food insecurity and use of food banks with feelings of embarrassment and shame. Research looking specifically at the impact of particular welfare reform policies has documented perceived impacts of such changes on emotional well‐being (Winter, Burman, Hanley, Kalambouka, & McCoy, ). In a similar period, there has been increasing talk in counselling, psychology and psychotherapy of the importance of “social justice” (Cutts, ; Winter, Maciagowska, Mangan, & Toor, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The obverse of these can be seen in the rise of diagnoses of anxiety, vulnerability and other forms of distress associated with financial pressures, precarity and insecurity, that can lead even to suicide (Barr et al, 2015;Ellis et al, 2013;Isin, 2004 ). (Indeed it is worth noting that a key rationale for undertaking our study was because of the escalation in referrals to psychotherapy services in which some of the research team were involved, see also Winter et al, 2016). In particular, as with the discursive shift from 'unemployment' (a structural condition) to 'worklessness' (figured as an individual attribute or state), processes of psychologisation are at work (De Vos, 2012) that correspond both with the occlusion of global and local structural explanations and -as a correlate of responsibilisation -imply a retraction or minimisation of the social bond.…”
Section: A Foucauldian Discursive Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Together, what these examples indicate is how policy discourse, in this case a housingrelated welfare reform that has widespread impacts on family and children's wellbeing and their education (Winter et al, 2016), is both reproduced and transformed by the various subjects who are both subjectified by, but also become subjects of, these discourses. We have claimed that such policies are educational in a double sense: highlighting the educational impacts of social and welfare changes, but also via the ways neoliberal state policies mobilise pedagogical strategies to incite and regulate subjectivity.…”
Section: -2)mentioning
confidence: 99%