Youth Unemployment and State Intervention
In the early 1980s, against the background of chronic unemployment in Britain, the particular plight of young people had come to be identified as a subject for special concern. Anxieties were expressed, as they were in the 1930s, as a twin concern for a waste of the nation’s resources and for the demoralization of youth, leading potentially to anti-social behaviour.

Originally published in 1982, this volume of essays identifies a number of key issues in the pattern of state response to youth unemployment which had evolved in the inter-war and post-war periods. The contributors discuss a number of related themes, such as how the problem has been defined and created as a kind of ‘moral panic’, and how contemporary measures recapitulate the rhetoric and policies of pre-war interventions. They examine the relationship between youth unemployment measures and the education sector, the responses of the trade unions, and also consider how young people themselves respond to special programmes. A critical assessment is made of the further education elements in the special measures: in particular, the question is asked: do these young people need ‘social and life skills’ training? The book charts the changing nature of the state response to youth unemployment since 1974, and stresses throughout the inappropriate nature of ‘temporary’ amelioration of a long-term, even permanent, problem.

1141049266
Youth Unemployment and State Intervention
In the early 1980s, against the background of chronic unemployment in Britain, the particular plight of young people had come to be identified as a subject for special concern. Anxieties were expressed, as they were in the 1930s, as a twin concern for a waste of the nation’s resources and for the demoralization of youth, leading potentially to anti-social behaviour.

Originally published in 1982, this volume of essays identifies a number of key issues in the pattern of state response to youth unemployment which had evolved in the inter-war and post-war periods. The contributors discuss a number of related themes, such as how the problem has been defined and created as a kind of ‘moral panic’, and how contemporary measures recapitulate the rhetoric and policies of pre-war interventions. They examine the relationship between youth unemployment measures and the education sector, the responses of the trade unions, and also consider how young people themselves respond to special programmes. A critical assessment is made of the further education elements in the special measures: in particular, the question is asked: do these young people need ‘social and life skills’ training? The book charts the changing nature of the state response to youth unemployment since 1974, and stresses throughout the inappropriate nature of ‘temporary’ amelioration of a long-term, even permanent, problem.

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Youth Unemployment and State Intervention

Youth Unemployment and State Intervention

Youth Unemployment and State Intervention

Youth Unemployment and State Intervention

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Overview

In the early 1980s, against the background of chronic unemployment in Britain, the particular plight of young people had come to be identified as a subject for special concern. Anxieties were expressed, as they were in the 1930s, as a twin concern for a waste of the nation’s resources and for the demoralization of youth, leading potentially to anti-social behaviour.

Originally published in 1982, this volume of essays identifies a number of key issues in the pattern of state response to youth unemployment which had evolved in the inter-war and post-war periods. The contributors discuss a number of related themes, such as how the problem has been defined and created as a kind of ‘moral panic’, and how contemporary measures recapitulate the rhetoric and policies of pre-war interventions. They examine the relationship between youth unemployment measures and the education sector, the responses of the trade unions, and also consider how young people themselves respond to special programmes. A critical assessment is made of the further education elements in the special measures: in particular, the question is asked: do these young people need ‘social and life skills’ training? The book charts the changing nature of the state response to youth unemployment since 1974, and stresses throughout the inappropriate nature of ‘temporary’ amelioration of a long-term, even permanent, problem.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032312064
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 08/19/2024
Series: Routledge Revivals
Pages: 154
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Teresa L. Rees and Paul Atkinson

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements. Notes on Contributors. Abbreviations. 1. Youth Unemployment and State Intervention Paul Atkinson and Teresa L. Rees 2. Juvenile Unemployment and the State Between the Wars Gareth Rees and Teresa L. Rees 3. Workless Youth as a ‘Moral Panic’ Geoff Mungham 4. Whose Needs? Schooling and the ‘Needs’ of Industry Dan Finn 5. Who Cares? The MSC Interventions: Full of Easter Promise Graham Markall and Denis Gregory 6. Trades Unions and Special Measures for the Young Unemployed Denis Gregory and Christine Noble 7. The Job Creation Programme: Some Reflections on its Passing Graham Markall 8. Client Response to the Youth Opportunities Programme Howard Williamson 9. Social and Life Skills: The Latest Case of Compensatory Education Paul Atkinson, Teresa L. Rees, David Shone and Howard Williamson. Bibliography. Index.

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