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Author(s)

Krys Maki

Publisher

Fernwood Publishing

Publication Year

2021

ISBN: 9781773634791

Categories:

  • Social Work → Activism & Social Movements
  • Sociology & Anthropology → Class, Inequality & Oppression
  • Social Work → Family & Relationships 
  • Women & Gender Studies → Feminism
  • Public Policy
  • Women & Gender Studies → Structural Violence

 
View more details about this title on the publisher's website:

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Single Mothers Under Welfare Surveillance

While the poor have always been monitored and surveilled by the state when seeking financial support, the methods, techniques, and capacity for surveillance within and across government jurisdictions has profoundly altered how recipients navigate social assistance. Welfare surveillance has exacerbated social inequality, especially among low income, Indigenous, and racialized single mothers. Krys Maki unpacks in-depth interviews with Ontario Works caseworkers, anti-poverty activists, and single mothers on assistance in Kingston, Peterborough, and Toronto, and employs intersectional feminist political economy and critical surveillance theory to contextualize the ways neoliberal welfare reforms have subjected low-income single mothers to intensive state surveillance. Maki centres their experiences to examine how their status as lone parents prompted fraud investigations and invasive questioning about their relationship status, and triggered investigations by other governing bodies such as child welfare agencies. This book also examines the moral and political implications of administering inadequate benefits alongside punitive surveillance measures. Despite significant restraints, anti-poverty activists, caseworkers, and recipients have discovered individual and collective ways to resist the neoliberal agenda.

Contributors

Krys Maki

Krys Maki is an activist scholar specializing in mixed-methods community-based participatory research. They currently work as the research and policy manager at Women’s Shelters Canada, a national network of violence against women shelters based in Ottawa, Ontario.

Chapter Contributors Pages Year Price
In the introduction, Maki discusses their personal history as it relates to the topic of the book, and explores the feminization of poverty. They also define key concepts and terms, detail their …
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Krys Maki 20 2021 $2.00
This chapter provides an overview of the history of welfare in Ontario, zoning in on specific policies related to the roles of state power, surveillance, and regulation in the lives of poor …
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Krys Maki 31 2021 $3.10
This chapter is primarily descriptive, drawing on content analysis the author conducted on the Ontario Works Act, 1997 regulations and directives, as well as informal and formal interviews with …
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Krys Maki 21 2021 $2.10
This chapter centres the voices of welfare recipients. Their narratives emphasize the dehumanizing experiences of OW’s constant surveillance, inadequate benefits, and workfare demands as …
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Krys Maki 33 2021 $3.30
Indigenous and Black single mothers’ stories are centred in this chapter, as they faced some of the harshest investigations and treatment.
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Krys Maki 22 2021 $2.20
This chapter explores how caseworkers are situated in the welfare surveillance apparatus. Caseworkers embody surveillance, which is shaped by the sociocultural and political values of society and …
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Krys Maki 37 2021 $3.70
The goal of this conclusion is to find, assess, and explore counternarratives, subversions, and acts of resistance that oppose workfare and surveillance.
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Krys Maki 25 2021 $2.50

Modal title

Canada Council for the Arts
Canada
Nova Scotia

This project is funded in part by the Government of Canada. Ce projet est financé en partie par le gouvernement du Canada.

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