Revi, B.2015-12-032015-12-032014Citizenship Studies, 2014; 18(3-4):452-4641362-10251469-3593http://hdl.handle.net/2440/97125T.H. Marshall's concept of ‘social citizenship’, developed in the 1949 lecture ‘Citizenship and Social Policy’, remains a vital study of welfare in developed nations. However, Marshall's social citizenship has come under attack as undermining civil liberties, or falling short of offering real equality to marginalised groups. This article returns to Marshall's lecture to show that he was in fact aware of such problems, but nonetheless held the provision of social rights to be a valuable normative project. Furthermore, this article argues that a new social citizenship, incorporating collective rights claims, could present a strong challenge to neoliberalism in contemporary welfare debates.en© 2014 Taylor & FrancisT.H. Marshall; social citizenship; neoliberalism; welfare stateT.H. Marshall and his critics: reappraising 'social citizenship' in the twenty-first centuryJournal article003002802410.1080/13621025.2014.9052850003358425000142-s2.0-84900543691117110