Poverty in Scotland 2007

Edited by John H McKendrick, Gerry Mooney, John Dickie and Peter Kelly

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The re-established Scottish Parliament promised to promote distinctly Scottish ways of addressing poverty and social exclusion in Scotland. This new edition of Poverty in Scotland examines how successful the combined efforts of Westminster and Holyrood have been in tackling poverty in Scotland.

Drawing on the increasing number of sources of data and poverty measures, Poverty in Scotland 2007 provides up-to-date facts and figures on poverty, and how that poverty impacts on people and places across Scotland. It expands on the information provided in the previous four editions, draws on the experience of people living in poverty, and includes

  • measurements of poverty;
  • living with poverty;
  • groups vulnerable to poverty;
  • rural poverty, community-based responses, financial exclusion, local taxation, employability and health.

The book includes a selection of essays from leading figures in the voluntary and academic sectors. These highlight the distinctive features of Scotland’s experience of poverty and the extent to which reserved and devolved policies have contributed to progress in tackling it. The book concludes with a discussion on how policy needs to develop if poverty in Scotland is finally to become a thing of the past.

A5 paperback, 182 pages
ISBN 978 1 901698 97 8     January 2007    £11.00

Published by CPAG in association with the Scottish Poverty Information Unit, the Open University and the Poverty Alliance.

One copy of this book will be sent automatically to CPAG Policy and Comprehensive members in Scotland.


Out of Reach
Benefits for disabled children

Gabrielle Preston with Mark Robertson

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Current statistics indicate that over a million children living in poverty are affected by disability. Significant additional costs, low levels of employment and inaccessible benefits contribute to shocking levels of poverty among families with disabled children. Although disability living allowance lifts many families out of poverty, and facilitates access to preventative and support services, too many disabled children still do not get the disability benefits to which they are entitled.

Drawing on interviews with families and a survey undertaken by Contact a Family, Out of Reach argues that better administrative processes and increased take up of disability living allowance would improve the lives of disabled children, enhance their life chances and reduce child poverty. It contains a number of detailed recommendations about how national and local government can improve access to financial support for disabled children. The report concludes that ensuring disabled children receive the benefits to which they are entitled is essential if the Government is to reach its 2010 target of halving child poverty.

A5 paperback, 112 pages
ISBN 978 1 901698 99 2    December 2006   £11.00


A Route out of Poverty? Disabled people, work and welfare reform

Edited by Gabrielle Preston

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Disability is both a cause and a consequence of poverty. Disabled people are more likely to be poor because they experience barriers to employment, high living costs, low wages, and inadequate benefits and tax credits. People living on a low income are also more likely to become disabled because of the close association between poverty and ill health.

A Route out of Poverty? explores the evidence linking poverty and disability. Drawing on interviews conducted by CPAG, it also examines the experiences and attitudes of disabled parents to paid employment; whether disability benefits and support services are accessible, adequate and appropriate; and the impact government policy has had on their own and their children’s lives.

A Route out of Poverty? is published in response to the Government’s Welfare Reform Green Paper, which aims to increase the employment rate of people who are sick or who have a disability and to reduce the number of people claiming incapacity benefit by one million. It argues that overcoming poverty is essential if the extent of disability and ill health is to be reduced. Support mechanisms, and the attitudes and behaviour of employers also need a major overhaul if welfare reform is to offer 2.7 million disabled adults and children a real route out of poverty.

A5 paperback, 142 pages June 2006 £11.00

ISBN10: 1 901698 93 9
ISBN13: 978 1 901698 93 0

Contents and authors – A Route out of Poverty?

Foreword – Bert Massie
Bert Massie is Chair of the Disability Rights Commission

Introduction – Gabrielle Preston
Gabrielle Preston is Policy and Research Officer at CPAG

1. Disabled people, poverty and the labour market – Guy Palmer
Guy Palmer is Director of the New Policy Institute

2. Children with disabled parents – Hugh Stickland and Richard Olsen
Hugh Stickland is an employment adviser in the Economic and Labour Market Division at the Department for Work and Pensions. Richard Olsen was Research Fellow in the Nuffield Community Care Studies Unit at the University of Leicester and is now a mental health adviser.

3. Changing weights and measures: disability and child poverty – Tania Burchardt
Tania Burchardt is Academic Fellow at the Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion at the London School of Economics

4. Living with disability: a message from disabled parents – Gabrielle Preston

5. Incapacity benefit and welfare reform – Gabrielle Preston

Conclusion – Gabrielle Preston


At Greatest Risk: the children most likely to be poor

Edited by Gabrielle Preston

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cover image:
www.JohnBirdsall.co.uk
 

How great is the risk of a child being poor in the UK? According to one calculation a child has a 3% risk of poverty if living in a two parent family where both parents work, rising sharply to 74% where no parent is in work.

Yet the reported numbers don’t show the true extent of the problem. Certain ‘at risk’ groups are hidden in the statistics and some are disproportionately at risk or experience multiple disadvantages: such as lone parent families, children or parents with disabilities, larger families, Traveller families and asylum seekers.

At Greatest Risk identifies these various groups and looks at how to tackle the particular issues most affecting them. Benefit adequacy, work and worklessness, and housing are major issues. There must be a shift in government policy to address the needs of the most vulnerable children.

Throughout this book, key questions are posed for a Government that is intent on making its third term truly historic, progressing towards the eradication of child poverty in 2020. At Greatest Risk is essential reading for anyone concerned with child poverty, including politicians, policy makers, academics and social activists.

A5 paperback, 208 pages
ISBN 1901698 78 5 June 2005 £10.00

Contents and authors: At Greatest Risk

Foreword – Ruth Lister
Ruth Lister is Professor of Social Policy, Loughborough University, and Donald Dewar Visiting Professor of Social Justice, University of Glasgow.

Introduction - Gabrielle Preston
Gabrielle Preston is Policy and Research Officer at CPAG.

Part one: Poverty trends – causes and consequences

  • 1. Child poverty: an overview – David Piachaud
    David Piachaud is Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics.

  • 2. The adequacy of benefits for children – Sue Middleton
    Sue Middleton is Director of the Centre for Research and Social Policy, Department of Social Studies, Loughborough University.

  • 3. Working a way out of poverty? – Paul Dornan
    Paul Dornan is Head of Policy and Research at CPAG.

  • 4. Children in acute housing need – Sue Regan and Jenny Neuburger
    Sue Regan is Director of Social Policy at Shelter.
    Jenny Neuburger is Senior Policy Officer at Shelter.

Part two: Groups at particular risk of poverty

  • 5. Poverty among black and minority ethnic children – Gary Craig
    Gary Craig is Professor of Social Justice at the University of Hull.

  • 6. Disabled children – Ruth Northway
    Ruth Northway is Professor of Learning Disability Nursing at the Unit for Development in Intellectual Disabilities, School of Care Sciences, University of Glamorgan.

  • 7. Asylum seeker families – Pamela Fitzpatrick
    Pamela Fitzpatrick is a welfare rights worker at CPAG.

  • 8. Child poverty in larger families – Jonathan Bradshaw
    Jonathan Bradshaw is Professor of Social Policy at the University of York.

  • 9. Parents in prison: the impact on children – Janet Walker and Peter McCarthy
    Janet Walker is Professor of Family Policy and Director of the Newcastle Centre for Family Studies at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
    Peter McCarthy is Honorary Principal Research Associate at the Newcastle Centre for Family Studies.

  • 10. Children with disabled parents – Hugh Stickland and Richard Olsen
    Hugh Stickland is an Economic Adviser at the Department for Work and Pensions.
    Richard Olsen is a Research Fellow in the Nuffield Community Care Studies Unit at the University of Leicester.

  • 11. The social exclusion of Gypsy and Traveller children – Sarah Cemlyn and Colin Clark
    Sarah Cemlyn is Senior Lecturer in the School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol.
    Colin Clark is Senior Lecturer in Sociology in the Department of Geography and Sociology at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow.

  • 12. Young people leaving care: poverty across the life course – Mike Stein
    Mike Stein is Director of the Social Work Research and Development Unit at the University of York.

Conclusion – Gabrielle Preston


Recipe for Change: A good practice guide to school meals

Edited by Carrieanne Hurley and Ashley Riley

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School meals play an important role in the fight against child poverty. Yet school meal provision has seriously declined over recent decades. There is no longer a universal service, the nutritional quality of the food served is often poor, and over 350,000 children a day fail to claim their free school meal.

There is a wealth of evidence illustrating bad practice in school meal provision. Even where good practice exists, there are few opportunities to share experience with other schools and local authorities. Recipe for Change: a good practice guide to school meals is the first book to bring together examples of individual initiatives from around the UK that have significantly improved the quality and take-up of school meals.

The book also includes an overview of the link between nutrition and child poverty, and developments in school meals policy and practice over the last 50 years. It makes key policy recommendations and includes many practical ideas that school meals providers can adapt for use in their own community.

Foreword by Stephen Twigg MP. Contributions from: NCH, the children’s charity; CPAG; the London Borough of Newham; South Gloucestershire Council; Kingston upon Hull City Council; Glasgow City Council; the Venerable Bede C of E Secondary School, Sunderland; CPAG in Scotland; Sustain, the alliance for better food and farming.

Published in association with the New Deal for Communities, Recipe for Change is a vital new resource for schools, colleges, local authorities, health workers, parents and anyone concerned with child poverty and the quality of our school meals service.

A5 paperback, 96 pages
ISBN 1 901698 61 0 August 2004 £9.00

Also see:


Tax Credits: one year on

Marilyn Howard

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Introduced in April 2003, the new tax credits – child tax credit and working tax credit – represent a major change in government policy on making work pay for low-income families and are critical to the success of the Government’s pledge to end child poverty by 2020.

Tax Credits: one year on reviews the first year of the new system and makes policy recommendations for the future. Drawing on case studies provided to CPAG by welfare rights advisers across the UK, the book looks beyond the well-documented implementation problems and examines broader issues of concern, including childcare, income assessments, overpayments and the relationship with other benefits. The problems experienced by some families in the scheme’s initial 12 months highlight the need for further reform if tax credits are to be truly successful in eradicating child poverty.

1 901698 73 4 June 2004 £9.00

Also see:


Ending Child Poverty by 2020: the first five years

Editor: Paul Dornan

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Five years on from the Government’s historic pledge to abolish child poverty within twenty years, CPAG has brought together leading academics and campaigners to reflect on the progress that the Government is making towards this goal.

Ending Child Poverty by 2020 examines the impact of child poverty, including from children’s own perspectives, and considers what further steps the Government needs to take to realise its ambition. Employment as a route out of poverty, childcare policy and area-based initiatives are all considered.

Ending Child Poverty by 2020 shows that much progress has been made, but there is more to do. Eradication of child poverty is within our grasp, but unless the Government takes more radical measures in future, the goal may not be achieved.

1 901698 72 6 February 2004 £9.00


Poverty: the facts

5th edition
Jan Flaherty, John Veit-Wilson and Paul Dornan

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Poverty: the facts (5th edition) is published by leading national charity the Child Poverty Action Group. It is the most authoritative and up to date analysis of poverty in Britain. It claims that although some regions and countries in the UK are poorer than others, each contains diverse areas and cities with different poverty levels. It also considers recent government initiatives and reports on their ‘limited’ success.

Poverty: the facts now includes an index for easy reference. It is an essential resource for campaigners, policymakers, journalists, students and academics.

‘Presents a clear picture of the growth of poverty in Britain and the divide between rich and poor’ - Community Care

‘CPAG is one of the most respected and statistically careful of the poverty lobbies’ - Financial Times

1 901698 62 9 March 2004 £10.95

Download a 4-page update of Poverty: the facts (47KB pdf file) Updated 2007


The Costs of Education: a local study

Emily Tanner, Fran Bennett, Harriet Churchill, Geoffrey Ferres, Sue Tanner and Sharon Wright

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School uniforms and trips, after school clubs, sport and music lessons… Despite having a 'free' education system, the additional costs associated with a child's schooling are growing every year. These costs impose a significant burden on parents trying to make ends meet on a low income. As a result many children are excluded from participating fully in school activities. Financial assistance is sometimes available, but not all parents are aware it exists, or else they may be reluctant to ask.

The Costs of Education presents – often in their own words – the concerns of a group of parents in the Oxford area about the extra costs associated with their children's education. The authors go on to make practical recommendations to schools, local education authorities and national government. A topical subject tackled in a readable style, this new study – carried out by CPAG Oxford and District Branch – is essential reading for anyone who cares about children and their education.

1 901698 57 2 August 2003 £6.95


Parallel Lives? Poverty among ethnic minority groups in Britain

Lucinda Platt
Foreword by Lord Bikhu Parekh

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In Britain today the chances of being poor vary enormously according to your ethnic group. Parallel Lives? poverty among ethnic minority groups in Britain explores the extent to which particular minority groups lead a parallel existence to that of the population as a whole, through greater rates of poverty and deprivation. It identifies the ways in which past discrimination and disadvantage has affected the current welfare of minority groups. It evaluates the extent to which current structures and policies perpetuate or mitigate deprivation. And it reflects on the prospects for the future: for today’s children and for future generations. It also considers the attempts that have been made to tackle ethnic minority disadvantage and the proposals that have been put forward.

A decade after CPAG first published Poverty in Black and White, Parallel Lives? draws on the increased wealth of data and research now available to provide an essential resource on the facts and figures on ethnic minority poverty. It makes comparisons both with the majority, ‘white’ population and within the ethnic minority population as a whole.

Parallel Lives? is essential reading for academics, researchers, students, policymakers, campaign groups and anyone interested in ethnic minority issues.

1 901698 49 1 December 2002 £10.95


Poverty in Scotland 2002
People, places and policies

4th edition
Editors: Usha Brown, Gill Scott, Gerry Mooney and Bryony Duncan

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The re-established Scottish Parliament promised to promote distinctly Scottish ways of addressing poverty and social exclusion in Scotland. Three years later, with around a third of Scottish children still living in poverty, this latest edition of Poverty in Scotland examines how successful it has been.

Drawing, for the first time, on new Scottish sources of data and poverty measures, Poverty in Scotland 2002 provides up-to-date facts and figures on poverty in Scotland. It expands the information provided in the previous three editions and includes:

 

  • measurements of poverty
  • employment, low pay and increasing inequality
  • groups vulnerable to poverty
  • living with poverty

Comparative data is included throughout to enable comparisons with the rest of the UK.

This edition also includes, for the first time, a selection of essays from leading figures in the political, academic and voluntary sectors in Scotland. These highlight the distinctive features of Scotland’s experience of poverty, as well as its similarities to the rest of the UK. They also examine the national and regional economic factors affecting policy responses to poverty.

Poverty in Scotland 2002 is an essential guide for voluntary groups and community activists, teachers, policy makers, students and academics working in the anti-poverty field.

Published by CPAG in association with Scottish Poverty Information Unit

1 901698 50 5 November 2002 £10.95

Also see:

  • Press release: Government report card – ‘trying hard but must do better’
  • Summary of the main findings of the report


Poverty Bites: food, health and poor families

Elizabeth Dowler, Sheila Turner and Barbara Dobson

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There is increasing evidence that people who live for long periods on low incomes cannot afford sufficient food to maintain good health. This book explores why this happens and considers the consequences for families and children in terms of their nutritional, health and social wellbeing.

The authors challenge common myths around food poverty, and focus on four main policy areas:

  • food access and security, including the role of town planners and the food industry as well as problems of households managing on a small budget;
  • nutrition and health – evidence of how food poverty affects families and children;
  • current local and national initiatives; and
  • challenges for action – what can be done by government, industry and health/regeneration professionals to tackle food poverty long-term?

Poverty Bites, in my view, is the best summary of current understanding and data about food poverty’
- Tim Lang, Professor of Food Policy, Thames Valley University

1 901698 45 9 December 2001 £9.95


Paying the Price: carers, poverty and social exclusion

Marilyn Howard

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There are almost two million people in the UK providing are and support to someone, often a relative, who cannot manage alone because of their age, health or disability. The unpaid work of these carers saves the taxpayer an estimated £34 billion a year in health and social services. Yet the price is paid by the many carers who live in poverty, excluded from social activities and paid employment, and who often feel isolated and unrecognised in their role.

Paying the Price draws on new research to examine the impact of caring on different types of carer, including young carers, parents, working-age carers and carers over pension age. Case studies illustrate the problems faced by different groups.

While there have been a number of positive government initiatives, the depth and extent of poverty and social exclusion among carers mean that more is needed to ensure that those who care for others continue to do so. In particular, Paying the Price examines the support available to carers and recommends urgently needed improvements to welfare benefits, services and other support.

Download the final chapter of the book, including summary and conclusions and recommendations (26KB pdf)
Download a colour leaflet summarising the book. (41KB pdf)

1 901698 39 4 October 2001 £9.95


An End in Sight? Tackling child poverty in the UK

Geoff Fimister (ed)

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An authoritative analysis of the Blair government’s record in tackling child and family poverty from 1997-2001. New Labour got off to a bad start by carrying out the previous government’s plans to cut lone parents’ benefits. Yet within two years Tony Blair had pledged to abolish child poverty within 20 years, and measures were being taken to increase the incomes of poor families.

In this book, distinguished contributors from various fields assess Labour’s policy measures. They look beyond the headlines to determine what real progress was made in this period towards abolition of child poverty.

The authors examine the Government’s performance in a number of policy areas relating to different aspects of poverty: employment; education; health; housing; neighbourhood renewal; the racial dimension.

The book also looks at the future of children’s benefits, and sets out what further anti-poverty measures need to be implemented by future governments.

'A comprehensive audit of deprivation' The Guardian

119 pages 1 901698 34 3 February 2001 £9.95

Further information on this website:


When Children Pay: US welfare reform and its implications for UK policy

Rosemary J. Link and Anthony A. Bibus, with Karen Lyons Foreword by David Bull

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The concepts behind 'Welfare to Work' – the 'New Deal' – are imported from the United States. But how relevant is the American experience of welfare reform to the UK, and what lessons are there for a British Government aiming to abolish child poverty within twenty years?

When Children Pay aims to reach a critical understanding of both US and UK approaches to poverty and income maintenance, highlighting what may work and what is unlikely to work when transplanted from the US to the UK. As well as analysing the US approach, it presents evidence of its success or otherwise in alleviating child poverty. The authors conclude with recommendations for British policy makers to take on board when planning to abolish child poverty.

There is an urgent need for this study given a continuing UK interest in welfare reform policies implemented in Wisconsin and other American states.

Rosemary Link is Professor of Social Work and Chair of the Professional Studies Division, Augsburg College, Minnesota. Anthony Bibus is the BSW Programme Director and teaches social work at Augsburg College. Karen Lyons is Reader in Social Work at the University of East London. David Bull is Associate Senior Lecturer in International Social Welfare and Public Policy at the University of Bristol, and a former Chair of CPAG's Executive Committee.

Read David Bull's foreword.

192 pages 1 901698 15 7 September 2000 £9.95
($18 including P&P if ordering from the US)


Poverty First Hand: poor people speak for themselves

Peter Beresford, David Green, Ruth Lister and Kirsty Woodard

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Poverty First Hand is a unique account of poor people's own analysis of poverty: its definition, causes and effects; their views on government and media treatment of poverty; their views on what policies are needed and what part poor people should play in them. It is based on a two-year participatory nationwide project that involved a wide range of groups of people with direct experience of poverty, including lone parents, disabled people, parents with pre-school age children, people on benefits and low income, unemployed people, older people, young offenders and homeless people.

Poverty First Hand offers a forceful first hand analysis of poverty in the UK which has profound implications both for poverty debates and the future of anti-poverty policy.

'The politicians and social policy gurus, who shape anti-poverty measures, are often economically and geographically distant from poor people. Poverty First Hand demonstrates that low-income citizens can collectively form and express their solutions. Not only should they be listened to, they should also be incorporated into government policy-making bodies.' Bob Holman, Neighbourhood Worker, Easterhouse Estate, Glasgow

232 pages 0 946744 89 0 July 1999 £9.95



Filling the Gap: free school meals, nutrition and poverty

Will McMahon and Tim Marsh

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Over a million children living in poverty in the UK are currently missing out on free school meals either because they are not entitled or because they do not take up their right.

Filling the Gap
explores why so many of our poorest children do not get free school meals. It examines the stigma attached to this entitlement, and focuses on the nutritional arguments underpinning the campaign to extend provision to children whose parents receive working families' tax credit.

In April 2000 responsibility for the free school meals service passes to schools themselves, giving child poverty campaigners the opportunity to ensure that schools provide a nutritious and satisfying meal
and a service that does not stigmatise children. Filling the Gap provides the facts, figures and arguments for all those campaigning on school meals issues.

50 pages 1 901698 25 4 December 1999 £5.00


Children and Work in the UK

Bridget Pettitt (ed)

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Children and Work in the UK is the first comprehensive review of the role and extent of children's work in this country today. It traces the historical roots of child labour from the industrial revolution through to today's part-time jobs, and examines how these fit alongside compulsory education. Issues covered include: which children work and why; whether such work is healthy or harmful; what can be learned from the experiences of children working in developing countries; why attitudes towards part-time paid work and school-based work experience schemes are so different.

In addition, this book makes a number of important policy recommendations which should inform any future debate on the issue.

Contributors: Norman Barton, Nicola Croden, Ellen Heptinstall, Sandy Hobbs, Shirley Horton, Michael Lavalette, Madeleine Leonard, Jim McKechnie, Rachel Marcus, Sue Middleton, Jules Shropshire, Ben Whitney.

'Reveals that more than a million children are forced to work in their spare time to boost household incomes...alarmingly, the evidence suggests that poorer children work the longest hours and so suffer educationally'  The Guardian

Published by CPAG in association with Save the Children.

200 pages 1 901698 13 0 July 1998 £9.95


Poverty, Crime and Punishment

Dee Cook

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The view that poverty causes crime is often simply taken for granted. This book critically examines how we think about the links between poverty, crime and punishment. It shows that crime is committed for a variety of reasons by the rich as well as the poor, but that, in an increasingly unequal society, the poor are penalised more. Poverty, Crime and Punishment is the first book to signal to the Labour Government the task it faces in genuinely being 'tough on the causes of crime', and in reconciling its commitment to social justice with the pressing need to restore faith in the criminal justice system.

'It courageously confronts the assumptions and moral hazards which have predicated social policy for so long - the nuclear family, the 'underclass', the permissive society'  Michael Mansfield QC

176 pages 0 946744 97 1 1997 £8.95


Britain Divided: the growth of social exclusion in the 1990s

Alan Walker and Carol Walker (eds)

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Produced in the run-up to the last General Election, Britain Divided chronicles the processes of social exclusion, looking at tax and social security changes and the growth of poverty and inequality. Different dimensions of exclusion are examined, including how it is compounded by gender and race, and how poor people have fared worst in education, housing, health and unemployment. Regional inequalities, privatisation, food policy and other issues are assessed. A bleak picture is presented, but Britain Divided also offers a way forward for improving social securit, arguing that we can afford a decent welfare state.

Contributors include John Hills, Tim Lang, Ruth Lister, Carey Oppenheim, David Piachaud, Jane Millar, Elaine Kempson and Peter Townsend.

'The first study of poverty in all its forms during 18 years of Conservative rule...one of the most comprehensive examinations of the growth of poverty and social inequality since 1979' The Guardian

'The study charts how economic inequality has grown across a wide range of of fields ranging from access to quality education and healthcare to the provision of adequate housing'  Financial Times

320 pages 0 946744 91 2 1997 £8.95


Not To Be Ignored: young people, poverty and health

A Dennehy, P Harker and L Smith

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This is the first study of the connection between poverty and the health of young people. The authors, from Bristol University's Department of Social Medicine, explore: the causes of ill health; education, social security and housing issues; health intervention and promotion strategies for young people; and, the effectiveness of existing resources. There are also positive proposals for improving health care for the young. Interviews with young people help to illuminate attitudes towards health issues, and convey the reality of being young and poor in Britain today.

'Children and young people have now overtaken pensioners as the largest age group in poverty and their health is suffering as a result..(Not To Be Ignored) shows that the main poverty-related health problems are accidents, respiratory problems, depression, schizophrenia, dietary deficiencies, substance abuse and sexually transmitted diseases. Suicide rates for young men have doubled since 1975 and are almost three times higher for young poor people than for those from better-off backgrounds'  The Independent

'Surprisingly little seems to have changed since the first UK epidemiological study of child health in 1947...The CPAG report also shows a clear connection between respiratory diseases and poverty, as did the first UK study on the effects of poverty and poor housing conditions on children's health'   The Lancet

Published by CPAG in association with The King's Fund.

192 pages 0 946744 90 4 1997 £8.95


Child Support: issues for the future

Fran Bennett

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The latest research findings show the impact of the child support scheme on children, lone parents, fathers and second families, and the wider effect on attitudes to family responsibilities and obligations. Child Support: Issues for the future highlights the main issues for drawing up realistic policy proposals for the future of child support.

'The Child Support Agency is hurting the very people it should be helping the country's poorest children...The study, by the Child Poverty Action Group, says it has made children more deprived...only a minority of single parents receive maintenance, through the CSA or otherwise'  Observer

48 pages 0 946744 96 3 1997 £5.95


This is a detailed listing of CPAG's policy publications: section 1 of 3:
go to section 2;
go to section 3;
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