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Daniel Woodward

Thesis Title: Indebted to the state: the role of debts-to-government in the social reproduction of the relative surplus population in post-financial crisis England.

Daniel's research focuses on the role that debt plays in the social reproduction of low-income households. It addresses a critical gap within the current literature by investigating the role that an increasingly problematic, yet neglected, form of household debt plays, namely debts owed to the state. In particular, the research focuses on two of the most common forms of debts-to-government in England: benefit overpayments and council tax arrears. His research investigates how these debts-to-government have grown in significance since the global financial crisis, and aims to elucidate how the influence peoples' interactions with the labour and credit markets. Furthermore, the project explores how the growth of these debts potentially undermines the social reproduction of low-income households in England, drawing upon Marx's concept of the relative surplus population. Through a detailed exploration of the impacts that these debts-to-government have on social reproduction, Daniel's research aims to further develops our understanding of the state's role in the reconstruction and disciplining of the relative surplus population, in relation to both the labour and credit markets. Finally, his research asks what the growing significance of debts-to-government reveals about the British state's role as creditor in the post-global financial crisis juncture.

Biography

Daniel is a first year PhD student based in the Department of Sociology. His research investigates the impact that debts owed to the state have upon the social reproduction of the relative surplus population in England. He has previously conducted research into Universal Credit's relationship with the creation and collection of benefit-related debts-to-government, and the implications that this relationship has for claimants' experiences of poverty, receipt of welfare, and broader indebtedness. He has also investigated how the British state's role as a creditor has expanded in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.

Prior to commencing his PhD, Daniel completed an MSci in Biological Sciences at the University of Birmingham, and an MSc in Social Inequalities and Research Methods at the University of Warwick. He has experiences working in both the further education and environmental education sectors.

Other Research Interests

  • Debt
  • State Theory
  • Social Reproduction
  • Welfare

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Sociology

Warwick

2023 Cohort, +3.5

Daniel.Woodward@warwick.ac.uk 

@DanWoodward93

LinkedIn: danielwoodward93

https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/sociology/staff/woodward/ 

Supervisory Team

Professor Nicholas Gane

Dr Iain Pirie

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