This article takes on the challenge of what Robert Proctor calls “agnotology”
(the study of ignorance) to analyse the current assault on the British welfare state
by think tanks, policy elites and conservative politicians. The assault is traced back to
the emergence of the Centre for Social Justice think tank, founded in 2004 by the
current Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan-Smith. I argue that a familiar litany
of social pathologies (family breakdown, worklessness, antisocial behaviour, personal
responsibility, out-of-wedlock childbirth, dependency) is repeatedly invoked by the
architects of welfare reform to manufacture ignorance of alternative ways of addressing
poverty and social injustice. Structural causes of poverty have been strategically ignored in
favour of a single behavioural explanation—“Broken Britain”—where “family breakdown”
has become the central problem to be tackled by the philanthropic fantasy of a “Big
Society”. My agnotological approach critically explores the troubling relationship between
(mis)information and state power. Originally published: Antipode Vol. 46 No. 4 2012 ISSN 0066-4812, pp. 948–969, doi: 10.1111/anti.12002
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- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12002
- Published in
- United Kingdom