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Dive into the research topics where Katherine Hill is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine Hill.


Disability & Society | 2016

The additional cost of disability: a new measure and its application to sensory impairment

Donald Hirsch; Katherine Hill

Abstract This article introduces a method using consensual budget standards to estimate additional costs incurred by households that include disabled people with specified impairments. The article reports on a first application of this to UK single adults with sensory impairments. Using the Minimum Income Standard method, the research aims to identify the cost of disability by working with groups of disabled people to agree what additions to minimum budgets for non-disabled people are required for someone with a given impairment. This provides a more tangible account of the cost of disability than economic analysis of living standards achieved by disabled and non-disabled people, and adds to surveys of actual spending on additional items, which do not account for unmet need. The research on vision and hearing impairment yields new insights into costs arising from the way disabled people live their everyday lives, not just from spending on adaptations and equipment.


Archive | 2017

Diluting substantive equality: why the UK government doesn't know if its welfare reforms promote equality

Simon Roberts; Bruce Stafford; Katherine Hill

Abstract The UK Coalition government introduced a raft of welfare reforms between 2010 and 2015. As part of its response to the financial crisis, reforms were designed to cut public expenditure on social security and enhance work incentives. Policy makers are required by legislation to have due regard to the need to eliminate discrimination, advance equality of opportunity and foster good relations between different people. This Public Sector Equality Duty is an evidence-based duty which requires public authorities to assess the likely effects of policy on vulnerable groups. This chapter explores the extent to which the Department for Work and Pensions adequately assessed the equality impacts of key welfare reforms when policy was being formulated. The chapter focuses on the assessment of the impact of reductions to welfare benefits on individuals with protected characteristics – age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion and belief, sex and sexual orientation – including individual and cumulative impacts. It also considers mitigating actions to offset negative impacts and how the collection of evidence on equality impacts was used when formulating policy. The chapter shows that the impacts of the reforms were only systematically assessed by age and gender, and, where data were available, by disability and ethnicity with no attempt to gauge cumulative impacts. There is also evidence of Equality Impact Assessments finding a disproportionate impact on individuals with protected characteristics where no mitigating action was taken.


SOCIOLOGIA E POLITICHE SOCIALI | 2009

Le dinamiche del reddito nella terza età

Katherine Hill

Looking Behind Income Dynamics in Later Life - Later life can be seen as period of income stability compared to other stages of the life course, and a key issue for older people in low income households is that they have limited means of pro-actively improving their financial situation. This article draws on a qualitative longitudinal study which explored how older people experienced changes in their financial circumstances across a two year period. The findings demonstrate that even where people did not feel that their financial circumstances had changed overall, this did not necessarily indicate a steady state. The study explored the interrelationship between changes in income and outgoings, as well as changing needs, and this article provides an insight into how social and personal resources are drawn on to help manage financial change and maintain stability. In doing so, it illustrates the extent of work that can be involved in maintaining a steady state in constrained circumstances.


Archive | 2005

New Deal for Disabled People: An in-depth study of Job Broker service delivery

Jane Lewis; Anne Corden; Lucy Dillon; Katherine Hill; Karen Kellard; Roy Sainsbury; Patricia Thornton


Archive | 2007

Understanding resources in later life: views and experiences of older people

Katherine Hill; Karen Kellard; Sue Middleton; Lynne Cox; Elspeth Pound


Archive | 2003

New deal for disabled people national extension: findings from the first wave of qualitative research with clients, job brokers and jobcentre plus staff

Anne Corden; Tim Harries; Katherine Hill; Karen Kellard; Jane Lewis; Roy Sainsbury; Patricia Thornton


Archive | 2009

Managing resources in later life: older people's experience of change and continuity

Katherine Hill; Liz Sutton; Lynne Cox


Archive | 2011

Living on a low income in later life

Katherine Hill; Liz Sutton; Donald Hirsch


Archive | 2006

New Deal for Disabled People: second synthesis report - interim findings from the evaluation

Bruce Stafford; Laura Adelman; Katherine Hill; Karen Kellard; Kate Legge


Archive | 2004

New Deal for Disabled People (NDDP) : first synthesis report

Bruce Stafford; Karl Ashworth; Abigail Davis; Yvette Hartfree; Katherine Hill; Karen Kellard; Kate Legge; Siobhan McDonald; Sandra Reyes De-Beaman; Jane Aston; John Atkinson; Sara Davis; Ceri Evans; Jane Lewis; Siobhan O'Regan; Tim Harries; Anne Kazimirski; Candice Pires; Andrew Shaw; Catherine Woodward; Anne Corden; Roy Sansbury; Patricia Thornton

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Matt Padley

Loughborough University

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Noel Smith

Loughborough University

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Simon Roberts

University of Nottingham

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Lisa Holmes

Loughborough University

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