Kate Andersen
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katejandersen.bsky.social
Kate Andersen
@katejandersen.bsky.social
Social Policy Research Fellow at the University of York.
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New project will find out if the Scottish Child Payment alleviates financial hardship & impacts less tangible aspects of poverty like stigma. With @ruthpatrick0.bsky.social @kittyjstewart.bsky.social @emmatominey.bsky.social, Ilona Pinter & Suzanna Nesom, funded by @financialfairness.bsky.social
Kate Anderson, a research fellow at the University of York, writes about stigma faced by universal credit claimants – and why the Labour government must look at Social Security Scotland as an example for making a positive difference. ⬇️
https://bit.ly/42jUuiK
Brilliant that the poverty-producing 2 child limit is going. So glad of the difference this will make to families across the UK, including the parents who took part in the Benefit Changes and Larger Families project & generously shared their experiences with us. The benefit cap needs to go next.
November 27, 2025 at 2:03 PM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
New research from #CASE shows why tackling child poverty requires removing the two-child limit and benefit cap.
www.lse.ac.uk/news/employm...
New research | Why the two-child limit and benefit cap must be scrapped
New analysis shows why the two-child limit and benefit cap must be scrapped to tackle child poverty.
www.lse.ac.uk
November 17, 2025 at 1:43 PM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
NEW STATS: 1 in 9 children (1.6 million) are affected by the two-child limit.

Government’s moral mission to tackle child poverty will make our country a better, stronger place, but families urgently need action not just words.
July 10, 2025 at 9:11 AM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
We've published the first round of @safety-nets.bsky.social's Annual Policymaker Reports

These provide important insights for policymakers across the UK working to tackle child poverty

safetynets.study/publications...
Annual Policymaker Reports – A Safety Nets briefing
This is the first in a series of Annual Policymaker Reports that summarise key findings from across the Safety Nets project for policymaker audiences. Each series has five reports containing key infor...
safetynets.study
May 19, 2025 at 2:00 PM
V important research from @beckshewer.bsky.social showing the serious deficiencies in how the heinous 'rape clause' in the two-child limit operates in practice
In 2017 the UK government sparked outrage by enacting a 'non-consensual conception exception' to its two-child limit, but we know very little about how this 'rape clause' has played out in practice. My new research exposes fundamental flaws in the policy (details below)
May 7, 2025 at 10:56 AM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
Are you:
✅ Living in England, Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland?
✅ A parent or carer of a child under 18?
✅ Receiving at least one UK benefit (e.g. Universal Credit, PIP, Tax Credits) or asylum support?

If so – we’d love to hear from you.

safetynets.study/take-part
Safety nets — Social security for families in a devolved UK
This project will explore the extent of the devolution of social security within the UK and the realities, risks, and opportunities this poses for families with dependent children.
safetynets.study
April 7, 2025 at 3:34 PM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
New @lsepoliticsblog.bsky.social blog on local welfare as part of our @safety-nets.bsky.social research. In workstream 3 we're exploring discretionary & local welfare & asking questions about spatial inequalities & poverty reduction.

blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandp...
blogs.lse.ac.uk
April 1, 2025 at 11:43 AM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
“I never ever get to the end of the month feeling ok”

Today's poverty stats reveal growing inequality in UK. In latest @changingrealities.bsky.social briefing, parents share what life is really like & set out a new approach - and why the government must act.

changingrealities.org/writings/cut...
The latest Household Below Average Income (HBAI) statistics show that poverty continues to affect millions of children in the UK, with 4.5 million affected by poverty during 2023-2024, an increase of 100,00 on the year before. These figures should shame us all, and must be examined alongside the UK Government’s proposals to take £4.8 billion in social security support from some of the most vulnerable, and indeed poorest, among us. The Government’s own Impact Assessment suggests that 50,000 more children will be pulled into relative poverty as a direct result of these changes. But another way is possible. For the past five years, almost 200 parents and carers living on a low-income from all four nations of the UK have been working alongside researchers at the University of York and Child Poverty Action Group to document everyday life in poverty and to push for change. The project started life as Covid Realities in the pandemic and became Changing Realities in a cost-of-living crisis that has never gone away. In our work together, we have contributed real-time evidence to policymakers, challenged harmful media narratives, and developed co-produced recommendations for change.
changingrealities.org
March 27, 2025 at 10:51 AM
Ahead of the Spring Statement, piece from @kittyjstewart.bsky.social & I on how the two-child limit & the benefit cap need to be fully abolished if the child poverty strategy is to have real impact. Both policies cause damage to children's current & future lives. theconversation.com/our-research...
Our research shows the harm the two-child limit on benefits is doing. Only scrapping it can end this
Many parents we spoke to had resorted to using foodbanks or had cut back on food spending.
theconversation.com
March 26, 2025 at 1:55 PM
Reposted by Kate Andersen
1 in 2 children in families with three or more children will be in poverty by the end of this parliament without abolition of the two-child limit says @alexclegg.bsky.social @resfoundation.bsky.social today. The future must be better www.resolutionfoundation.org/publications...
Turning the tide • Resolution Foundation
Ahead of the Government’s Child Poverty Strategy, which promises to bring about “an enduring reduction in child poverty”, this report looks at what might be needed to achieve this welcome goal in the ...
www.resolutionfoundation.org
February 26, 2025 at 9:49 AM
New project will find out if the Scottish Child Payment alleviates financial hardship & impacts less tangible aspects of poverty like stigma. With @ruthpatrick0.bsky.social @kittyjstewart.bsky.social @emmatominey.bsky.social, Ilona Pinter & Suzanna Nesom, funded by @financialfairness.bsky.social
Kate Anderson, a research fellow at the University of York, writes about stigma faced by universal credit claimants – and why the Labour government must look at Social Security Scotland as an example for making a positive difference. ⬇️
https://bit.ly/42jUuiK
February 5, 2025 at 2:39 PM