
Simone Casey
@simonecasey
Yeh nah mastodon not a thing here for your brilliance. Views my own unless plagiarized
ID: 39035514
10-05-2009 11:50:33
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I always wanted to write a book and here it is!!! Women and Welfare Conditionality shows how women's lives are shaped by work and welfare laws past and present. Benefit sanctions don't work but do huge harm to women and children. Policy Press Urban Studies & Social Policy University of Glasgow


In today’s post, moderator Simone Casey laments delays to reform that mean fundamental changes to how people are treated when they are looking for work are still too far away. powertopersuade.org.au/blog/when-5-ye…

My The Guardian story: Black and minority ethnic universal credit claimants disproportionately likely to be hit with benefit sanctions, new official statistics published for the first time shows theguardian.com/society/2024/s…

I think I may have inadvertently made tea a key issue in the debate about the future of Jobcentres! 😳🫖 I shared a story from my time at DWP at the launch of the report that Polly Toynbee has written about here & it seemed to strike a chord... 🧵theguardian.com/commentisfree/…

New one from me with thanks to reviewers and Australian Journal of Social Issues Robo‐compliance in Australian employment services - Casey - Australian Journal of Social Issues - Wiley Online Library onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aj…



In today’s post, Robyn Hansen explores the private and public costs of relegating people outside the workforce to the ‘waste heap’: They Lie — Power to Persuade via Antipoverty Centre powertopersuade.org.au/blog/they-lie/…


Australia’s points system for jobseekers is failing 4 in 10, putting their payments at risk theconversation.com/australias-poi… via The Conversation - Australia + New Zealand

41% of Australians on Jobseeker are struggling to collect the number of points needed to stay on benefits writes Simone Casey from RMIT University #ausecon #auspol theconversation.com/australias-poi…




“Provider viability”. Two words we are sick of hearing. Senator Murray Watt should act in the interests of poor people, not poverty profiteers: pause “mutual” obligations immediately and work with welfare recipients to design a high quality, voluntary, public sector employment service.


jeremy poxon It’s true there are $7 billion in Workforce Australia contracts, but it’s not the real cost. The Workforce Australia inquiry was told the full cost of all programs, including DES and others, is $4 billion A YEAR. And that doesn’t include the cost of public servants who run it.




