It shows how the Department’s use of delaying tactics has helped deny justice to the relatives of those who have lost their lives.
The research highlights a decade-long battle by Disability News Service (DNS) and others to uncover the records that the DWP keeps on the deaths of Disabled people claiming benefits.
It draws on the online Deaths by Welfare timeline, co-produced by Disabled people and published in draft format last summer, to show how the Department has spent years attempting to “invisibilise” its role in the deaths of claimants.
The timeline tracks the slow, accumulated violence caused by the social security system over the last three decades by highlighting documents that are mostly publicly available.
The article, Weaponising Time in the War on Welfare, was researched and written by Dr China Mills – who leads the Deaths by Welfare project at Healing Justice Ldn, and is a senior lecturer in public health – and DNS editor John Pring.
It details the strategies that were used by the DWP “to distance their policies from being linked to people’s deaths”.
The article, published in the journal Critical Social Policy, focuses on the secret reviews carried out by the DWP into the deaths of claimants, now known as internal process reviews (IPRs).
It shows how, “despite being one of the main governmental tools to investigate deaths linked to the social security system”, the design of the reviews has made it almost impossible to hold the Department to account for deaths linked to its policies, procedures and failures.
But redacted versions of the reviews – revealing their recommendations – did eventually show how the actions of DWP Ministers, civil servants and private sector contractors have continued to be linked to the deaths of claimants, “making the disability benefits system deeply harmful and unsafe”.
The article argues that the DWP has “weaponised” delays in releasing information from the reviews and other documents.
But it shows how the timeline provided a way to “piece together seemingly unconnected singular events, along with key evidence that only came to light years after it occurred”.
This has allowed patterns of harm caused by the DWP to be tracked across time.
The article says that the IPR findings and recommendations “come from within the system that kills people, and therefore may never be enough for full accountability or justice”.
It concludes that the evidence of countless deaths suggests that the social security system needs “dismantling” and creating afresh, with Disabled people and their lived experience “at the core” of that work.
Source and for more information see Research exposes how DWP ‘weaponised’ time to avoid accountability for deaths available from disabilitynewsservice.com.
The research article Weaponising Time in the War on Welfare is available from journals.sagepub.com.