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    <eprintid>6545</eprintid>
    <rev_number>32</rev_number>
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    <userid>28</userid>
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    <datestamp>2008-05-26 02:43:30</datestamp>
    <lastmod>2008-07-18 10:59:54</lastmod>
    <status_changed>2008-07-16 17:26:23</status_changed>
    <type>article</type>
    <metadata_visibility>show</metadata_visibility>
    <contact_email>keith.jacobs@utas.edu.au</contact_email>
    <creators>
      <item>
        <name>
          <family>Arthurson</family>
          <given>K</given>
        </name>
        <id>karthurson@swin.edu.au</id>
      </item>
      <item>
        <name>
          <family>Jacobs</family>
          <given>K</given>
        </name>
        <id>keith.jacobs@utas.edu.au</id>
      </item>
    </creators>
    <title>Discourses about Australian social housing, social exclusion and employment: indications of the post welfare state?</title>
    <ispublished>pub</ispublished>
    <subjects>
      <item>360000</item>
      <item>220000</item>
      <item>370000</item>
    </subjects>
    <seo08>
      <item>940204</item>
    </seo08>
    <seos>
      <item>750605</item>
    </seos>
    <full_text_status>restricted</full_text_status>
    <note>The definitive published version is available online at: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals</note>
    <abstract>The dynamic between housing policy and wider welfare reform has been an&#13;
important theme within housing scholarship. As a background this paper considers Jamrozik’s&#13;
contention of a transition in social policy from a welfare state to a post welfare paradigm through&#13;
exploring the impact of ideological discourses for contemporary Australian social housing policy.&#13;
Our approach combines an analysis of the discourses of social exclusion in two key housing policy&#13;
documents and interviews with social housing tenants and professionals in South Australia. The&#13;
analysis serves to illustrate the ways in which contemporary housing policy reflects and is shaped&#13;
by competing ideological discourses. In particular, it makes explicit how the foundational&#13;
discourses shaping Australian housing policy has changed considerably over recent years,&#13;
reflecting, to a large extent, the influence of neo-liberal ideologies on the operation of government&#13;
policy making.</abstract>
    <date>2008</date>
    <date_type>published</date_type>
    <publication>Housing Theory and Society</publication>
    <volume>25</volume>
    <number>3</number>
    <id_number>10.1080/14036090801939828</id_number>
    <refereed>TRUE</refereed>
    <official_url>http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14036090801939828</official_url>
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