Welfare surveillance, income management and new paternalism in Australia


Autoria(s): Dee, Mike
Data(s)

01/12/2013

Resumo

This article discusses the situation of income support claimants in Australia, constructed as faulty citizens and flawed welfare subjects. Many are on the receiving end of complex, multi-layered forms of surveillance aimed at securing socially responsible and compliant behaviours. In Australia, as in other Western countries, neoliberal economic regimes with their harsh and often repressive treatment of welfare recipients operate in tandem with a burgeoning and costly arsenal of CCTV and other surveillance and governance assemblages. Through a program of ‘Income Management’, initially targeting (mainly) Indigenous welfare recipients in Australia’s Northern Territory, the BasicsCard (administered by Centrelink, on behalf of the Australian Federal Government’s Department of Human Services) is one example of this welfare surveillance. The scheme operates by ‘quarantining’ a percentage of a claimant’s welfare entitlements to be spent by way of the BasicsCard on ‘approved’ items only. The BasicsCard scheme raises significant questions about whether it is possible to encourage people to take responsibility for themselves if they no longer have real control over the most important aspects of their lives. Some Indigenous communities have resisted the BasicsCard, criticising it because the imposition of income management leads to a loss of trust, dignity, and individual agency. Further, income management of individuals by the welfare state contradicts the purported aim that they become less ‘welfare dependent’ and more ‘self-reliant’. In highlighting issues around compulsory income management this paper makes a contribution to the largely under discussed area of income management and welfare surveillance, with its propensity for function creep, garnering large volumes of data on BasicsCard user’s approved (and declined) purchasing decisions, complete with dates, amounts, times and locations.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/64994/

Publicador

Surveillance Studies Network

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/64994/2/64994.pdf

http://library.queensu.ca/ojs/index.php/surveillance-and-society/article/view/welfare_aus

Dee, Mike (2013) Welfare surveillance, income management and new paternalism in Australia. Surveillance & Society, 11(3), pp. 272-286.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 The author(s)

Licensed to the Surveillance Studies Network under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives license.

Fonte

Faculty of Health; School of Public Health & Social Work

Palavras-Chave #089900 OTHER INFORMATION AND COMPUTING SCIENCES #100500 COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGIES #160509 Public Administration #160510 Public Policy #160512 Social Policy #160602 Citizenship #160609 Political Theory and Political Philosophy #160799 Social Work not elsewhere classified #189900 OTHER LAW AND LEGAL STUDIES #Income Management #Surveillance #Welfare #BasicsCard #Centrelink
Tipo

Journal Article