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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A seven page paper which looks at the phenomenon of social exclusion, with specific reference to the welfare system in the UK and the ways in which government policies have attempted to address the issue, with varying degrees of success. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLsocexc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
order to assess the way in which social policies in the UK assess and deal with social exclusion, it is perhaps useful to establish in the first instance what social
exclusion comprises, and the kind of socio-cultural groups who are likely to be affected by it. Social exclusion can be regarded as a generic term for the effect on people
when there is a combination of social problems in their area - unemployment, poor housing, lack of education facilities, high crime-rate, high level of family breakdown and so on -
or it can also describe the phenomenon which certain groups undergo when they are "pushed out" of society due to a particular event or a particular characteristic.
Social exclusion might affect people of a particular gender
or ethnicity, for example, and the degree of exclusion might well be dependent on their socio-economic environment. In a predominantly white majority culture, one might expect that black people would
suffer from social exclusion due to discrimination leading to a reduction of opportunity on all social levels: however, one might also find that the degree of social exclusion suffered by
an affluent, professional, middle-class black family is significantly less than that suffered by an unemployed black family living in an impoverished inner-city area. Ethnicity is clearly a factor, especially since
the economic situation of the second family can be traced back to a history of discrimination against immigrants, but evidently it is not the only factor in this instance.
The parameters of social exclusion may
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