2015
DOI: 10.1017/s1474746415000469
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Intensive Family Intervention and the Problem Figuration of ‘Troubled Families’

Abstract: This article examines how intensive family interventions in England since 1997, including the Coalition Government's Troubled Families Programme, are situated in a contemporary problem figuration of 'anti-social' or 'troubled' families that frames and justifies the utilisation of different models of intensive family intervention. The article explores how techniques of classification and estimation, combined with the controversial use of 'research' evidence in policy making are situated within a 'rational ficti… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
(36 reference statements)
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“…The Coalition Government's TFP was the first semantic policy commitment to target and ‘turn around’ the lives of ‘troubled families’. It did, however, have clear roots in the earlier politics of ‘social exclusion’ developed under New Labour from 1997 (Ball and others, ; Butler, ). These, in turn, were based on the rolling out of Family Intervention Projects (FIPs); a new method of intervening in the lives of families developed in Dundee in 1995 aiming to reduce the number of homeless families and the high costs they represented to local authorities by preventing evictions through intensive supervision of family behaviour (Parr, ).…”
Section: ‘Troubled Families’ C 1997‐presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Coalition Government's TFP was the first semantic policy commitment to target and ‘turn around’ the lives of ‘troubled families’. It did, however, have clear roots in the earlier politics of ‘social exclusion’ developed under New Labour from 1997 (Ball and others, ; Butler, ). These, in turn, were based on the rolling out of Family Intervention Projects (FIPs); a new method of intervening in the lives of families developed in Dundee in 1995 aiming to reduce the number of homeless families and the high costs they represented to local authorities by preventing evictions through intensive supervision of family behaviour (Parr, ).…”
Section: ‘Troubled Families’ C 1997‐presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar practices have been identified in relation to ‘problem families’ during the post-war period (Todd, 2014) and under pioneer projects under New Labour. Parr and Nixon (2009: 108–9) note that local FIPs ‘developed an alternative conceptualisation “of the problem” of ASB [anti-social behaviour] that, in part, contradicted the national popular discourse at the time’ and that individual workers ‘actively challenged media stereotypes that referred to families as “neighbours from hell” or “yobs” (see also Parr, 2009; Ball et al ., 2016). A further central concern of FIPs and the TFP is their construction as a response not just to ‘troublesome’ families but to the putative failures of costlier ways of delivering services to such families.…”
Section: Implementation Negotiation and Resistancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…There has been a growing recognition of the inadequacy and indeed the immorality of pursuing responsibilisation agendas within the TFP which emphasise human agency, autonomy and rational choice within the context of broader neoliberal politics that actually diminishes the power and autonomy of the most marginalised sections of society (Tew, 2013;Ball et al, 2016;Boddy et al, 2016;Bond-Taylor, forthcoming). Researchers have argued for the need to develop adequately theorised responses to the 'problem' which take into account context, constraint and relationality in respect of families facing multiple disadvantages (Jack and Gill, 2013;Flint, 2012), whilst keeping issues of agency at the fore (Parr, 2011).…”
Section: We Had To Drag [The Washing Machine] Out Didn't We Try and mentioning
confidence: 99%