2014
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6478.2014.00665.x
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The New Puritanism: The Resurgence of Contractarian Citizenship in Common Law Welfare States

Abstract: In common law jurisdictions, legislative reforms to their welfare states are frequently framed in terms of their innovative nature. However, such legislative reforms, on the contrary, may be representative of a more historical ‘puritan’ view of welfare and citizenship, the doctrines of which originate in the aftermath of the sixteenth‐century Protestant Reformation, and which developed in the following centuries. The core values of this era have always remained within welfare legislation and policy in common l… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Larkin has traced the origin of attitudes towards social welfare from the Poor Law to the present day and his analysis shows that ‘[t]he culture of individual conscience and economic “individualism” was received as the intellectual inheritance of the Enlightenment period …’. He identifies the time spanning the end of World War II until the 1970s as representing the rise of collectivism with the more recent period signalling a return to a more contractarian approach. Marshall's definition has been criticised for his imprecision and this has allowed a wide variety of meanings and values to be attributed to it.…”
Section: Social Citizenship and The Social Contractmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Larkin has traced the origin of attitudes towards social welfare from the Poor Law to the present day and his analysis shows that ‘[t]he culture of individual conscience and economic “individualism” was received as the intellectual inheritance of the Enlightenment period …’. He identifies the time spanning the end of World War II until the 1970s as representing the rise of collectivism with the more recent period signalling a return to a more contractarian approach. Marshall's definition has been criticised for his imprecision and this has allowed a wide variety of meanings and values to be attributed to it.…”
Section: Social Citizenship and The Social Contractmentioning
confidence: 99%