📢 New paper, with Marco Pomati and Mark Stephens Housing affordability and poverty in Europe: on the deteriorating position of market renters Open access, read here: doi.org/10.1017/S004...
New paper, with Micheál Collins! The Cost-of-Living Crisis in the UK and Ireland: on Inflation, Indexation, and One-Off Policy Responses doi.org/10.1017/S147...
ONE WEEK LEFT to apply for a post-doc position to work alongside me on a Swiss-UK comparative study of low-quality work, in-work poverty and subjective well-being. ~2 yr post, lots of opportunity to publish. Details below. Please share! www.jobs.ac.uk/job/DDO678/r...
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Working from home means a morning of listening to the excellent new CMAT album. Recommended. cmatbaby.com
JUST OUT! If you're looking for a short overview of the nexus between Inflation and Social Policy and how that shapes our understanding of the current Cost-of-Living Crisis - look no further! Ideal for teaching! ☺️ Joint work w/ Daniel Béland, @rodhick.bsky.social , Bent Greve & Bea Cantillon
How can welfare states improve family resilience, and what does it even mean to be resilient? In this new paper, we propose a framework to understand inequalities in who experiences risks, and inequalities in how well families are resourced to respond to those risks. #rEUsilience
As “resilience” is increasingly used in European policy circles, it is important to acknowledge structural inequalities that are present in the capacity of families to be resilient. In this next ...
📢Two-year post-doc opportunity! Come work with me at Cardiff Uni on a UK-Switzerland comparative study of the relationship between low-quality work, poverty and well-being over time. Research Associate at Cardiff University (jobs.ac.uk)
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True, it's got some way to go. The feed needs to be more selective and few civil society orgs I follow have migrated yet. Still, the other place was past its best and increasingly difficult to justify. It's good to see you on here.
Neat to get my hands on the hard copy of this important volume on social policy responses to the pandemic. Many of the draft chapters were excellent; can't wait to read the final versions.
There's something refreshing about starting again here, where it's a little less crowded (for now), maybe a bit more focussed. I might even post more! (let's see)