TY - JOUR
T1 - An intersectional feminist analysis of compulsory income management in Australia
AU - Staines, Zoe
AU - Marston, Greg
AU - Peterie, Michelle
AU - Bielefeld, Shelley
AU - Mendes, Philip
AU - Roche, Steven
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding support for this research was received from the Australian Research Council (ARC) via an ARC Discovery Project (#DP180101252) led by Prof Greg Marston, and ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (#DE200100686) led by Dr Zoe Staines.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2024.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Globally, women experience poverty at disproportionate rates to men, with the situation being worse for Indigenous women and women of colour. Social security systems are one avenue for income redistribution that can alleviate poverty. However, such systems are themselves embedded within and produced by unequal social relations, meaning they can also serve to perpetuate and exacerbate social inequalities. This is exemplified under neoliberal welfare reforms, which have disproportionate negative impacts for women across the world (e.g. increased poverty and stigma, reduced health/wellbeing, and more). Again, this is particularly the case for Indigenous women and women of colour. In this article, we offer an intersectional feminist analysis of an intensive form of neoliberal welfare conditionality, Australia’s ‘compulsory income management’ program (CIM). CIM quarantines social security incomes onto cashless bank cards to restrict expenditure to ‘approved’ items. Drawing on interviews and surveys with 170 individuals who have personally experienced CIM, we show that it has myriad negative impacts that are especially borne by (Indigenous) women. These are not, we argue, unintended policy impacts, but are instead symptomatic of the gendered and racialised violence that is woven into patriarchal capitalism more broadly. Thus, the experience of CIM holds lessons for welfare states internationally.
AB - Globally, women experience poverty at disproportionate rates to men, with the situation being worse for Indigenous women and women of colour. Social security systems are one avenue for income redistribution that can alleviate poverty. However, such systems are themselves embedded within and produced by unequal social relations, meaning they can also serve to perpetuate and exacerbate social inequalities. This is exemplified under neoliberal welfare reforms, which have disproportionate negative impacts for women across the world (e.g. increased poverty and stigma, reduced health/wellbeing, and more). Again, this is particularly the case for Indigenous women and women of colour. In this article, we offer an intersectional feminist analysis of an intensive form of neoliberal welfare conditionality, Australia’s ‘compulsory income management’ program (CIM). CIM quarantines social security incomes onto cashless bank cards to restrict expenditure to ‘approved’ items. Drawing on interviews and surveys with 170 individuals who have personally experienced CIM, we show that it has myriad negative impacts that are especially borne by (Indigenous) women. These are not, we argue, unintended policy impacts, but are instead symptomatic of the gendered and racialised violence that is woven into patriarchal capitalism more broadly. Thus, the experience of CIM holds lessons for welfare states internationally.
KW - compulsory income management
KW - Indigenous women
KW - neoliberal welfare reform
KW - women
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205116112&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0047279424000205
DO - 10.1017/S0047279424000205
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205116112
SN - 0047-2794
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Journal of Social Policy
JF - Journal of Social Policy
ER -