1,661 results
Search Results
202. Atender la urgencia, individualizar la asistencia: acerca de los dispositivos de cercanía durante el proceso de recomposición neoliberal en Argentina (2015-2019).
- Author
-
Martínez Robles, Claudia Alejandra
- Subjects
NATION-state ,WORK environment ,LIVING conditions - Abstract
Copyright of Estudios Sociales (Santa Fe) is the property of Universidad Nacional del Litoral and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. EL PAPEL DE LA ECONOMÍA SOCIAL EN EL NUEVO CONTEXTO DE POLÍTICAS LOCALES TRANSFORMADORAS: EL CASO DE HERNANI BURUJABE.
- Author
-
MORANDEIRA-ARCA, JON, ETXEZARRETA-ETXARRI, ENEKOITZ, and EGIA-OLAIZOLA, ANDONI
- Subjects
NONPROFIT sector ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Prisma Social is the property of Revista Prisma Social and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
204. The Politics of Social Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Configurational Approach to Fee-Free Policies at the High School Level.
- Author
-
Asante, Gabriel
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,SECONDARY education ,RIGHT to education ,SCHOOL enrollment - Abstract
Governments in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are expanding access to high school education, which is a perpetuation of the previous focus on basic education. This study applies qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) using data from seven countries from 2010 to 2020 to examine the potential conditions of fee-free policies at the high school level. Five potential conditions are analyzed. They include the regime type, electoral competition, ideological lineage, economic conditions, and social context. The findings indicate the significant influence of electoral competition and a high level of lower secondary school enrolment for the adoption of fee-free policies. The absence of electoral competition leads to a lack of fee-free policy. The paper explains how elections, one indicator of representative democracy, motivate political leaders to initiate social policies. Additionally, the study challenges the relevance of two important explanations for expansionary social policy in the literature--the partisan theory of policy outcomes, and the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. Diversity of employment biographies and prospects of middle-aged welfare recipients.
- Author
-
Zabel, Cordula
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT reentry ,WORK experience (Employment) ,JOB vacancies ,EMPLOYMENT ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT forecasting - Abstract
Employment re-entry opportunities decrease with age. For middle-aged welfare benefit recipients, employment obstacles connected to age exacerbate further disadvantages connected to welfare receipt. At the same time, there is considerable diversity in middle-aged welfare benefit recipients' long-term employment trajectories, which has thus far received little attention. Policies aim to increase labour market participation at higher ages. To this end, it is important to understand specific difficulties and to be realistic when formulating goals for people with very diverse types of employment histories. Using large-scale register data, this paper's focus is on a cohort aged 45-54 in August 2012 in Germany. Sequence analysis aids in identifying characteristics relevant to employment histories over the past 19 years, from January 1993 to July 2012. Subsequent employment outcomes over the time span September 2012 to December 2018 are investigated, differentiating between jobs of different quality, and effects of training programmes on these outcomes are analysed using entropy balancing methods. Findings are that middle-aged welfare recipients' employment biographies are very diverse, ranging from very little employment experience, over long histories of intermittent employment, to long continuous employment histories. Employment history attributes significantly affect employment prospects. The analyses further show that it is not too late to invest in skills, independent of employment history type. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. A city of exceptional risks? A critical policy analysis of Hong Kong unemployment insurance.
- Author
-
Pun, Ngai, Jin, Shuheng, and Yang, Haocheng
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic engenders unemployment risks globally and locally. Reflectively engaging in Beck's risk society debates, this paper critically reviews the discursive effects of „risks" when employed by the government in debates about unemployment insurance since the 1997 sovereignty handover. We break down the concept of risk into four layers: moral risk, financial risk, socio-economic risk and political risk and bring to light the contradictory outcomes that colour the nuanced attitudes among the state, the NGOs and the affected subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. Ending Homelessness in Canada: Reflections from Researchers in the Field.
- Author
-
Buccieri, Kristy, Whitmore, Nicole, Davy, James, and Gilmer, Cyndi
- Subjects
HOMELESSNESS ,RESEARCH personnel ,DISCHARGE planning ,PUBLIC welfare policy ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Ten-year plans to end homelessness have become common in communities across Canada, yet homelessness persists. This study brings together experts in the field of homelessness to gain insight into whether homelessness can be ended and what steps need to be taken to accomplish this. Twenty-six Canadian homelessness researchers participated in video-recorded structured interviews in the summer of 2021. They were asked whether, and how, homelessness could be ended in Canada. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed for recurring themes. There was widespread agreement across the participants that homelessness could be ended in Canada by focusing on four distinct yet related areas. First, all levels of government must be held accountable for policy decisions they make, and they must learn from other countries, such as Finland, where social welfare policies are more robustly integrated. Second, Canada must continue to implement policies and laws that prioritize housing as a human right rather than a commodity. Third, there is a need for individualized choice-based supports, following the principles of Housing First, which emphasize community integration. Finally, preventive measures must be prioritized with a focus on improved systems alignment and discharge planning between institutions. This paper does not offer a blueprint for change, recognizing the extent of public and social policies, tax restructuring, and ideological shifts that will need to occur. Rather, it provides a thoughtful reflection from researchers on where we as a nation should focus our attention if we want to end homelessness in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
208. PRIORITIES FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SOCIAL FIELD IN UKRAINE AND ITS LEGAL REGULATION IN THE CONTEXT OF ADAPTATION TO EUROPEAN STANDARDS.
- Author
-
Dulik, Tetiana, Aleksandriuk, Tetiana, Taranenko, Viktoriia, Koriahina, Tetiana, and Cherba, Vita
- Subjects
SOCIAL integration ,UKRAINIANS ,SEX discrimination ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL justice ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL policy ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
Copyright of Ius Humani is the property of Ius Humani and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
209. The drivers of social procurement policy adoption in the construction industry: an Australian perspective.
- Author
-
Loosemore, Martin, Keast, Robyn, and Alkilani, Suhair
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,SUSTAINABILITY ,EVIDENCE gaps ,SOCIAL values - Abstract
The construction industry is the primary focus for social procurement policies in many countries. However, there has been little research into the drivers of social procurement policy adoption in this industry. To help address this gap in research, this paper reports the results of semi-structured interviews with fifteen social procurement professionals who are implementing social procurement into the Australian construction industry. Results reveal interesting historical parallels with the implementation of environmental sustainability initiatives. However, social procurement has yet to become normalized. There appears to be a high level of homogeneity in industry practice and while there is considerable scope for innovation, this is constrained by the prescriptive and 'top-down' nature of social procurement policies in Australia which make it difficult for organizations to respond 'bottom-up' to actual community needs. It is concluded that the considerable untapped potential of social procurement policies to create social value currently depends on the intrapreneurial efforts of a small number of emerging social procurement professionals who are individually challenging the many institutional norms and practices which undermine the implementation of these policies into the construction industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
210. Martin Bulmer and race and ethnic studies.
- Author
-
Solomos, John
- Subjects
RACE ,ETHNICITY ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL policy ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This contribution to the symposium focuses on those facets of Martin Bulmer's work that sought to analyse the role of race and ethnicity in the development of sociological research. It highlights, in particular, his continuing interest through much of his scholarship with the work of the Chicago School and of key figures within it in the development of both conceptual and empirical research agendas in this field. This interest was intimately linked to his long-standing curiosity about the origins of sociological research and the links between sociology and social and public policy. The paper also explores Bulmer's engagement with questions about race and ethnicity. It also highlights his contribution to the development of the journal Ethnic and Racial Studies as a key forum for the publication of empirical and theoretical research on race and ethnic issues, linking the contributions of diverse national scholarly traditions together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
211. Young Mr. Mises and younger historicists: origins of Mises's liberalism.
- Author
-
Bunyk, Mykola and Krasnozhon, Leonid
- Subjects
LIBERALISM ,SOCIAL space ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SOCIAL justice ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Mises's very first expression of a liberal outlook is usually associated with the 1919 Nation, Economy, and State because very little is known about his earlier work. Several recent studies, however, suggest that the Viennese social space and the Habsburg's socioeconomic reality influenced Mises's liberalism during his studies at the University of Vienna. This paper shows that Mises's liberal outlook traces back to his early work, influenced by Younger Historicist members of the Verein für Sozialpolitik, such as Knapp and Grünberg. We argue that Mises's early work expressed a rationalist liberal outlook that intertwined with the social policy reform aspirations of the Verein für Sozialpolitik. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. Critical harmony: A goal for deliberative civic education.
- Author
-
Ho, Li-Ching and Barton, Keith C.
- Subjects
HARMONY (Philosophy) ,CIVICS education ,JUSTICE ,INTERPERSONAL conflict ,SOCIAL policy ,YOUNG adults - Abstract
This paper makes the case for including critical harmony as a complement to justice within civic education. The concept of harmony is significant for civic education because it acknowledges the crucial role that relationships play in society—an important moral, ethical, and social ideal in many cultures around the world. Harmony must also incorporate a critical dimension, however, by embracing conflict and tension, valuing difference and diversity, and striving for balance among divergent voices. By using examples of public issues such as housing and gender identity to illustrate the relational dimension of public policy, this paper argues that the concept of critical harmony can contribute to a more comprehensive foundation for students' deliberation of civic issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Introducing the adopter perspective in social innovation research.
- Author
-
Hölsgens, Rick
- Subjects
SOCIAL innovation ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,ENGLISH language ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
It is generally well-accepted in innovation research that consumer/user adoption of an invention is key to its diffusion. Despite general awareness about the importance of the adopter perspective in innovation diffusion, the majority of the literature on social innovation, hardly addresses the adoption-side of innovation diffusion. Social innovation potential therefore often remains under-utilized. In this paper the result of a review of 468 (predominantly English language) publications on social innovation is provided (based on Web of Science), searching for the adopter perspective in social innovation research. The findings show that, although some hints at the role of adopters, and their environment, can be found in the literature, attention for the willingness and capacities of potential adopters is meager in peer-reviewed publications. Propelled by high policy expectations, at the national as well as European level, scientific interest in social innovation has been booming over the last decade. Without a proper understanding of social innovation diffusion dynamics and adopter willingness and their interactions with existing institutions, expectations may not be fulfilled and specific social innovation policies that have been emerging across Europe may not be able to achieve intended policy goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Social embeddedness and food justice at farmers markets: the model farmers market program.
- Author
-
He, Arden and Morales, Alfonso
- Subjects
POOR people ,MARKETING models ,EMPLOYEE selection ,FARMERS' markets ,FOOD security ,DATA security - Abstract
Purpose: Despite the progressive values espoused by farmers' market patrons, markets have been shown to be exclusive to low-income people of color. This paper examines a particular food security program at a farmers market to ask how social embeddedness and moral economy can be incorporated to dignify underrepresented groups at the market. Design/methodology/approach: This case study uses an embeddedness framework to analyze the design of a community-oriented food security program at a farmers market. Findings: Social embeddedness contributed to the success of the program in a number of meaningful ways: face-to-face community outreach reached target populations at a human level, and engendered spontaneous support from organizations with shared values. Graphics and text used in marketing material can make transparent the moral economy of the market. However, as soon as social embeddedness is legitimized within a program design, suppressed tensions emerge that are associated with the perceived dichotomy between academic, technically-oriented professionals and on-the-ground community members. In particular, the selection of personnel from the community itself led to interpersonal tensions as well as technical difficulties. Research limitations/implications: The analysis proceeds from an administrative point of view, and does not include direct interviews with market attendees or vendors. Practical implications: The findings suggest that long-term support is necessary for the implementation of socially embedded food security programs, so that personnel can build trust and technical competence over time. Originality/value: This paper offers solutions to the limitations of farmers markets as sites for food security programs, and uniquely contextualizes policy administration in a social embeddedness lens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. A critical examination of Australian youth case management: compounding governing spaces and infantilising self-management.
- Author
-
Lohmeyer, Ben Arnold and McGregor, Joel Robert
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,TRADEMARK infringement ,AUSTRALIANS ,COMMUNITY services ,SOCIAL policy ,CRITICAL analysis - Abstract
Case management is promoted as a trademark of community service practice with young people funded by neoliberal social policy. In spite of this, case management practice and case managers have largely escaped the attention of youth scholars. In this paper, we examine the funding parameters of two youth case management services in Australia to reveal the governing effects on young people, case managers and NGOs. We develop an analytical framework that exposes the compounding effect of interacting governable spaces that facilitates a critical analysis of case management revealing the problems of governance within this seemingly generic practice method. Shifting focus from the young person as the object of governance to include the case manager and case management as separate but interacting governable spaces, provides new insights into the problematisations underpinning case management practice with young people. We argue compounding governable spaces provides insight into the infantilisation of young people that is amplified and reinforced within and between case managers, and case management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Exploring Universal Basic Income and Job Guarantee as Social Security Policy Responses to COVID-19 Challenges in South Africa.
- Author
-
Mdlalose, Methembe
- Subjects
BASIC income ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL security ,SOCIAL policy ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,POLICY discourse - Abstract
By mid-2020, South Africa had shredded 2.2 million jobs, and less than 40% of these had been recuperated by the end of the last quarter. Resultantly, COVID-19 has threatened people's aptitude to afford themselves and their families a passable standard of living, thus relying on social protection. In South Africa, social protection has been a topical theme in recent years, given that the existing approach has proved unsuccessful in convincingly reducing poverty, inequality and unemployment. Using a desktop review, this paper examined South Africa's social protection regime and its impact during COVID-19. It further explored the applicability of a Universal Basic Income and Job Guarantee in South Africa. The findings revealed that, while COVID-19 social security interventions may be considered sizeable, they have not been effective in offsetting the impact of poverty and unemployment during the COVID-19 pandemic. Consequently, the article provided policy intervention recommendations for social security post-COVID-19 in South Africa. Finally, as a caveat, given that the nature of the social policy discourse in South Africa is heavily shaped by political priorities and ideological preferences, whichever decision is adopted may likely depend on considerations of the abovementioned factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
217. An Ethnographic-Discourse Analysis of the Socio-political Effects of Interaction Between Cash Transfer Programme Authorities, Caregivers and Non-beneficiaries
- Author
-
Puorideme, Dennis
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
218. Between Hope and Fear: The Creation of a More Inclusive EU Single Market Through Art. 9 TFEU
- Author
-
Sybe de Vries and Rik de Jager
- Subjects
art. 9 tfeu ,social mainstreaming ,eu single market ,social policy ,eu charter ,european court of justice ,Law ,Law of Europe ,KJ-KKZ - Abstract
(Series Information) European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, 2022 7(3), 1405-1429 | Article | (Table of Contents) I. Introduction. - II. Different levels of social mainstreaming and EU law. - II.1. The relationship be-tween the economic and social at EU level. - II.2. Art. 9 TFEU. - III. A story of hope (I): Art. 9 TFEU, EU competition law, and the Four Freedoms. - III.1. The "social exemption" for collective bargaining. - III.2. Social interests as an exception ground to free movement. - IV. A story of hope (II): Art. 9 TFEU and EU legislative harmonisation. - IV.1. The internal market legal bases of inter alia art. 114 TFEU. - IV.2. The importance of art. 153 TFEU in making the EU internal market more socially inclusive. - V. Fears undermining the safeguarding of social interests in the EU single market through art. 9 TFEU. - V.1. Relatively vague and unclear wording of art. 9 TFEU. - V.2. The constitutionalisation of EU (free movement) law and the unclear scope of EU fundamental social rights protection. - V.3. The (some-times) flawed reasoning in the case law on EU free movement law. - V.4. The question of competence, technological innovation and digitalization. - VI. Conclusion. | (Abstract) In this Article, we assess to what extent art. 9 TFEU, which contains the social mainstreaming clause, may be used to shore up the social dimension of the EU Single Market. The story of hope of a more socially inclusive internal market starts with the "porous" EU internal market legal framework itself and ends with art. 153 TFEU and the European Pillar of Social Rights. Yet, there are also fears that, despite the language of social mainstreaming, the EU cannot deliver on the promise of art. 9 TFEU for various reasons, including the limited legislative competences of the EU to pursue social policies. While we mainly want to emphasize the story of hope, we will also look into the fears and how some of these could be addressed.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
219. Vulnerability and Social Control at the Margins: A Contribution to an Interdisciplinary Trialogue on Vulnerability
- Author
-
Brown, Kate
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
220. The pursuit of welfare efficiency: when institutional structures turn ‘less’ into ‘more’
- Author
-
Steinbacher, Christina
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. Ideas in transition? Policymakers’ ideas of the social dimension of the green transition
- Author
-
Gerstenberg, Anne
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. Toolkit to Measure Well-being in Mining regions.
- Subjects
MINERALS ,MINERAL industries ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
This paper develops a framework to measure well-being standards in OECD regions specialised in mining activities. It explores the relevant indicators to measure well-being for selected OECD mining regions across the three dimensions of wellbeing: economic, social and environmental, and compare their trends with those of other regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. Governmental management of social housing as an element of state social policy: Bibliometric analysis
- Author
-
Fidan Mammadova, Nargiz Fatahova, Shaban Mammadov, Ruslan Gasimov, and Shukur Aliyev
- Subjects
affordable housing ,bibliometric analysis ,government intervention ,public administration ,social housing ,social policy ,Business ,HF5001-6182 - Abstract
Social housing for socially vulnerable segments of the population is a significant component of governmental social policy, as it is directly linked to demographic and migration processes, socially vulnerable groups and people with special needs, poverty alleviation, social integration, and community development. The study conducts a bibliometric analysis (using VOSviewer tools) of the scientific literature on social housing policy and management. The study filtered more than 6,000 research papers indexed in the Scopus database from 1983 to 2024. The purpose was to structure the global scientific knowledge on governmental management of social housing as an element of the state’s social policy, focusing on the following directions. The first is the evolution of scientific thought. The analysis revealed a rapid growth in scientific interest starting from 1991; the earliest articles were published in the United Kingdom, Netherlands, and the United States, while scholars from Spain, Mexico, and Italy joined after 2020. The second is the complexity or conversely – concentration of research networks. The top five countries by the number of works are the United Kingdom, Australia, the Netherlands, Italy, and the United States; the most powerful research schools are in the Netherlands, Australia, and the United Kingdom; the most extensive scientific connections are held by the Netherlands, the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, and France. The third is the content-thematic orientation of the research. The paper identified the predominance of works from social sciences; social housing issues are most frequently studied in connection with public health and inequality issues.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
224. Back to the Future in EU Social Policy? Endogenous Critical Junctures and the Case of the European Pillar of Social Rights.
- Author
-
Carella, Beatrice and Graziano, Paolo
- Subjects
SOCIAL & economic rights ,SOCIAL policy ,SOFT law ,CIVIL society ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The launch of the European Pillar of Social Rights occurred at a phase of endogenous critical juncture for Social Europe. By analyzing the Pillar's formulation and adoption process, we investigate to what extent the European Commission used the involvement of civil society and policy responsiveness to foster change in the modes of governance and legitimize stronger intervention in the social sphere, by re‐launching the methods of coordination introduced in the 1990s. Methodologically, we rely on a content analysis of EU policy documents before and after the public consultations, a content analysis of over 60 position papers and on interviews with policy actors. We find that despite increased openness and responsiveness, the Pillar initiative did not allow to alter the predominance of 'soft law' routes and patterns of intergovernmentalism characterizing the governance of EU social policy, a result that further qualifies the conditions that lead (endogenous) critical junctures to generate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
225. Superdiversity and social policies in a complex society: Social challenges in the 21st century.
- Author
-
López Peláez, Antonio, Aguilar-Tablada, María Victoria, Erro-Garcés, Amaya, and Pérez-García, Raquel María
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,CULTURAL pluralism ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
Copyright of Current Sociology is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. Automatability of Work and Preferences for Redistribution*.
- Subjects
LAYOFFS ,STANDARD deviations ,SOCIAL policy ,ECONOMIC policy ,AUTOMATION - Abstract
Although the importance of technological change for increasing prosperity is undisputed and economists typically deem it unlikely that labour‐saving technology causes long‐term employment or income losses, people's anxiety about automation and its distributive consequences can be an important shaper of economic and social policies. This paper considers the political economy of automation, proposing that individuals in occupations more at risk of job loss due to automation have stronger preferences for government redistribution. I analyse individual‐level cross‐national data from the European Social Survey and other sources, covering up to 32 countries and more than 170,000 individuals. I find a robust positive association between occupational automation risk and preferences for redistribution. As long as the conditional (mean) independence assumption is satisfied, my estimates suggest that a one standard deviation increase in automatability increases preferences for redistribution with roughly 0.05 standard deviations, which is comparable to the difference in preferences for redistribution between women and men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Emotions, affect and social policy: austerity and Children's Centers in the UK.
- Author
-
Jupp, Eleanor
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIAL policy ,ACTIVISM ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper considers the 'affective turn' within social sciences, alongside the shift to a more emotional public and political sphere, and the implications of these shifts for the study of social policy. A context of austerity cuts and reforms to welfare services contributes to heightened and unstable emotions surrounding services. A case study of Sure Start Children's Centers in the UK is presented, in two areas where centers were threatened with closure. Interview and ethnographic material with both staff and service users is presented to show how emotions became heightened and politicized in this context. Both staff and service users articulated the values of the centers in new ways, drawing on intimate and emotional registers of experience. Overall, the material shows how in this context, emotions can be understood as place-based, relational and politicized, potentially producing different values and visions of welfare services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Introduction: The crisis in mental health and education.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EDUCATION policy ,CURRICULUM frameworks ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
The introduction to this Policy Special Issue begins by situating the themes of mental health and education in the broader context of the public mental health conversation, and the new challenges to individual and collective life brought about by the COVID‐19 pandemic. It then charts some of the ways mental health has developed in educational thinking and educational policy in recent years. Philosophy is then introduced as a form of thinking that encourages a slowing down of—and critical a standing back from—the momentum that gathers around the proliferation of talk about young people's problems in mental health in society, and the interventions designed to tackle these problems in education. What brings the contributions of this Policy Special Issue together is, it is observed, a degree of unease about current approaches to mental health in education. An overview of the contributions is then provided, which introduces the reader to the ways that philosophical thinking is brought to challenge and reconceive current ways of thinking about mental health in education in this Policy Special Issue. The five sections of the Policy Special Issue are also introduced: From clinics to classrooms; Tackling mental health in the curriculum; Sickness in society; Language in crisis; and Curing education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Komparace peněžité pomoci v mateřství v Polské a České republice.
- Author
-
Duda, Danuta, Turečková, Kamila, and Buryová, Ivona
- Subjects
MATERNITY benefits ,MATERNITY leave ,SOCIAL security ,BIRTH rate ,SECURITY systems - Abstract
The main topic of the paper is a comparison of maternity benefits in the Czech Republic and Poland. The first part is dedicated to the definition and description of maternity leave and its grounding in the social security systems of both countries, based on the current legislation in both countries. Next, the maternity benefits in the Czech Republic and Poland are presented in tables which yields interesting results for the observed period. The third part represents the core of the paper – comparison of the maternity benefits in the Czech Republic and Poland. The expenditures in both countries in the observed period 2010-2019, including their proportion to the total social security expeditures, as well as birth rates in the said time period, are graphically presented in this part. In the final part, the obtained data are evaluated and the results of the comparison are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. The Mental Health Implications of Social Acceleration on Canadian Youth.
- Author
-
French, Daniel
- Subjects
MENTAL health of youth ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
The acceleration of social change and pace of life in both post-secondary and employment settings has contributed to rising mental health concerns for Canadian youth. Previous research primarily placed the responsibility for such concerns on modernization; however, such an analysis does not account for the continual acceleration of youth mental health concerns, suggesting that modernization does not entirely encompass this social phenomenon. Using Hartmut Rosa's theory of social acceleration, this paper seeks to determine how social policy can be used to mediate the effects of a high-speed society on youth mental health. Contrary to former assumptions, this paper finds that growing youth mental health concerns can be largely attributed to the current high-speed accelerating society rather than modernization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
231. Repackaging authority: artificial intelligence, automated governance and education trade shows.
- Author
-
Gulson, Kalervo N. and Witzenberger, Kevin
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL intelligence in education ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,INFORMATION technology ,EDUCATIONAL exhibitions ,LEARNING Management System ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Artificial Intelligence has the potential to be an important part of education governance. It is already being built into everything from business intelligence platforms to real-time online testing. In this paper, we aim to understand how AI becomes, and forms, a legitimate part of authority in contemporary education governance in what we call the automated education governance assemblage, that incorporates technology companies and AI-supported products used in education. We focus on EduTech Australia – an education technology trade show in Sydney – as a way to look at: (i) how the different aspects of automated governance are connected at EduTech, including the relations between different participants, companies and products; and (ii) how the automated governance assemblage works to legitimise and constitute EduTech as a policy space and site of new authorities in education governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. OS REFLEXOS DO PROGRAMA NACIONAL DE CIDADES MÉDIAS E DAS POLÍTICAS PÚBLICAS DE MORADIA NA CONFIGURAÇÃO INTRAURBANA DA ZONA NORTE DE SÃO JOSÉ DO RIO PRETO/SP.
- Author
-
Risso da Silva, Poliana, Pozzi de Castro, Carolina Maria, and Shoiti Ueda, Guilherme
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,LAND management ,HOUSING policy ,URBAN growth ,ECONOMIC models ,SOCIAL policy ,HOUSING management ,BANK mergers - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Brasileira de Estudos Urbanos e Regionais is the property of Associacao Nacional de Pos-Graduacao e Pesquisa em Planejamento Urbano e Regional and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. India's tryst with Modi-fare 2014–19: towards a universalistic welfare regime.
- Author
-
Nakray, Keerty
- Subjects
PUBLIC welfare ,WELFARE state ,INFORMAL sector ,SOCIAL security ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Purpose: This paper examines India's tryst with welfare/dis-fare with a specific focus on Modi Sarkar's (2014–2019) dirigiste style reforms. In the welfare regime research, Esping-Andersen (1990) classified advanced economies into three ideal-types of liberal, conservative-corporatist and social-democratic welfare states by government-led welfare provisions and levels of decommodification. The classical typology discussions include countries such as India which is classified as informal-insecurity regime due to a large informal economy with no social security for workers. Based on theoretical standpoints of the political economy of welfare states, comparative historical institutionalism and critical junctures this article examines Modifare has expanded formal welfare to its citizens. Design/methodology/approach: The article uses crisp-set analysis to examine the social policy developments under Modi's regime in India. Findings: This paper examines if the centre-right Modi government did bring about a radical departure from UPA I and II lacklustre welfare approach to the more strategic use of welfare reforms as a political weapon on a national scale. It concludes that Modi-fare falls short in being transformatory. Originality/value: The article is an original contribution to the field of comparative welfare regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. The elusive promise of universal social protection: the case of the Greek general minimum income (GMI).
- Author
-
Burgi, Noëlle M. and Kyramargiou, Eleni
- Subjects
INCOME maintenance programs ,INFORMAL sector ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL services ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Purpose: The need to alleviate poverty and achieve the United Nations (UN) 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) through Universal Social Protection (USP) mechanisms is a high priority for governments and international organisations (IOs). This paper focuses on the recent introduction of a general minimum income (GMI) in Greece, in the context of the international diffusion of governing expertise. It examines whether the "universal" scheme being implemented constitutes a paradigm shift likely to offer solutions to the country's previous fragmented and unjust welfare system, and to problems the society has faced since the 2010s depression. Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses critical grounded theory, with data gathering through iterative field observations and semi-structured interviews. Findings: Results highlight the elusiveness of USP normative promises: rather than enhancing people's effective freedoms to act as self-determining agents, USP pushes the poor to adapt to current degraded socio-economic conditions. Participation in the shadow economy is a structural feature of USP; it is implicitly tolerated insofar as it is regarded, in the words of the World Bank (WB), an "engine for growth". This constitutes an institutional and governance challenge for the implementation and expansion of social welfare programmes and could compromise the 2030 SDGs Agenda. Originality/value: While research to date has examined the "modernisation" of the Greek welfare system in a national or comparative perspective, it adds to the literature by framing the study in the field of global social policy, shedding light on the discrepancies between internationally designed mechanisms and the normative aims of USP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Guest editorial.
- Author
-
Cruz-Martinez, Gibran and Bernales-Baksai, Pamela
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,WELFARE state ,EQUALITY ,INCOME inequality ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to present an introduction to the special issue titled "Old and New Challenges for Welfare Regimes: A Global Perspective." Design/methodology/approach: The authors of the special issue combine case studies and comparative analysis across America, Asia, Africa and Europe. The authors were invited to develop the authors'ir studies with a focus on one or more of three axes: (1) institutional and governance challenges surrounding the implementation and expansion of social welfare programs,; (2) state of the art and diversity across emerging welfare states and; (3) challenges associated with migration and demographic pressures. Findings: Articles in this special issue contribute to the authors' understanding of recent challenges and transformations of welfare regimes, with special attention to the following policy areas: youth emancipation, the reduction of poverty and income inequality, social protection and taxation, the role of historical institutionalism to better understand social policy implementation and expansion, the lack of transformative social protection in "'New Right'" governments, determinants of social equality and the transformative effect of migration into welfare states. Originality: To the authors' knowledge, the existing publications on transformations and challenges of welfare regimes are still very much centered on a Western European context. The global perspective and diversity of policy areas covered aims to shed light on the important lessons and policy implications from less traditional welfare states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. La planeación de la política social en México, 2019-2024.
- Author
-
Galindo Castro, Adrián
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE power ,SOCIAL goals ,SOCIAL policy ,POLITICAL parties ,SOCIAL planning - Abstract
Copyright of Carta Económica Regional is the property of Universidad de Guadalajara and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Mining sustainability and circular economy in the context of economic security in Ukraine.
- Author
-
Markevych, Kateryna, Maistro, Serhii, Koval, Viktor, and Paliukh, Viktor
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,ECONOMIC security ,SOCIAL policy ,MINES & mineral resources ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Purpose. The paper is devoted to the theoretical and methodological solution of the scientific problem of substantiating the relationship between the sustainability of mining and the implementation of the circular economy model in the context of the economic security of the state, with an emphasis on the importance of mineral resources. In addition, scientific and practical recommendations have been developed for regulating the circular economy in Ukraine in the context of ensuring economic security. Methods. The paper focuses on various experts and scientists' positions regarding environmental challenges, circular economy, mineral resource management, and economic security. Using the proposed approach of contour analysis of the relationship between the circular economy and the system-forming components of the economic security of the state, the place and role of the circular economy in the system of economic security have been determined. Findings. The research presents the results of a circular economy with the emphasis on mineral resources in the context of the economic security of the state. It has been determined that the circular economy concept combines the peculiarities of various system-forming economic security components (environmental, industrial, energy, mineral resource, social, food). It has been revealed that a circular economy is associated with various scientific trends of the ecological and economic system formation. Originality. The duality of the connection between the implementation of the circular economy model and the components of economic security has been proved, which opens up opportunities for strengthening economic security both through positive effects and certain short-term negative effects. Practical implications. A comprehensive analysis of using mineral resources in the circular economy in the context of the economic security of the state allows forming a number of scientific and practical recommendations for the sustainable management of economic security in Ukraine. This makes it possible to create a multi-level system for managing the circular economy in Ukraine, taking into consideration mineral resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. How has the media framed the introduction of the supervised injecting room in Victoria? A comparison of editorials of The Age and Herald Sun 2017–2022.
- Author
-
Mendes, Philip, Taylor, Robert, and Roche, Steven
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL attitudes , *PUBLIC opinion , *HARM reduction , *PHARMACEUTICAL policy , *DRUGS of abuse , *AGE - Abstract
Influenced by a harm reduction philosophy, the then Victorian Labor Government announced the establishment of the state's first medically supervised injecting room (MSIR) in North Richmond in late 2017. But, public and political opinion remains sharply divided as to the merits of the MSIR. One influence on policy development appears to be media commentary on the MSIR and the wider illicit drugs policy debate. This paper compares the official editorials of the two daily Melbourne newspapers, the Herald Sun and The Age regarding the MSIR, from November 2017 until November 2022. Based on 33 articles (Herald Sun, N = 28; The Age, N = 5), our findings identify philosophical differences between the two newspapers as reflected in their sources of information, language and highlighted issues. The Age was mostly supportive of both the introduction of the North Richmond MSIR and proposals for a second site. The Herald Sun's position was more ambiguous, ranging from qualified support for the North Richmond MSIR to strong opposition to further sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Unravelling the interlinkages: agency and vulnerability of hazardous child labour in Bangladesh.
- Author
-
Baten, Mohammed Abdul, Alam, Shafiqul, and Mostofa, Golam
- Subjects
- *
CHILD labor , *WORK environment , *CHILD abuse , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *POVERTY , *SOCIAL policy - Abstract
The prevalence of child labour in Bangladesh is a major concern, exposing children to hazardous working conditions with severe physical and psychological impacts on their well being. This ethnographic study investigates the interplay between the agency and vulnerability of child labourers in hazardous battery-recycling workshops, exploring the social, economic, and cultural factors that contribute to their vulnerability. The research posits that while addressing poverty and socio--economic challenges is essential to combat child labour, a blanket ban on child labour in developing countries might be unfeasible due to complex economic factors. Therefore, the study suggests a middle ground between the 'absolutist universalist' and 'contextualist' approaches. This approach entails improving working conditions, enforcing age-related labour laws, and revising child labour policies to reflect the needs and views of children and their families. It emphasises participatory decision-making and introduces support measures for children compelled to work, including residential vocational schools and stipends. The study also advocates treating hazardous child labour as child abuse, legally combating it, and increasing public awareness against such practices. Additionally, the paper underscores the necessity of re-evaluating current social policies and thoroughly assessing anti-poverty initiatives to effectively curb child labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Bread or roses? Trade unions, female employment and the expansion of work-family policies.
- Author
-
Cigna, Luca Michele
- Abstract
In the Fordist era, trade unions promoted welfare state expansion and coverage against risks for the broader workforce. With the shift to the post-industrial economy, however, new economic groups have been left without representation. This is particularly evident for women: despite a rapid increase in female employment since the 1980s, unions' membership base remains anchored in the male, old and industrial working class. Without the crucial pressure of labour, welfare systems have failed to enhance the reconciliation of work and family life. Under which conditions do unions support the expansion of work-family policies? Marshalling evidence from 20 OECD countries in the 1980–2010 period, this paper investigates the role of political actors in family policy reform. Findings suggest that unions promote the expansion of work-family packages when they are gender-inclusive and have institutional access to policy-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Vulnerability of low-income homeownership in the United States: An analysis based on household liquidity.
- Author
-
Ren, Chunhui
- Subjects
HOME ownership ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 ,LIQUID assets ,FINANCIAL security ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
In the United States after the Great Recession, despite growing attention to low-income households' homeownership vulnerability, the existing works tend to take specific angles and produce only piecemeal evidence. By placing liquid assets' function of mediating financial hardships in the context of homeownership dynamics, I establish a synthesized conceptual framework. Based on data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), I put this framework to a test and find that liquid assets not only reduce the risk of homeownership exit in general but play a pivotal role in accounting for low-income borrowers' elevated rates of exit. I discuss policy implications of the findings at the end of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. LABOUR MIGRATION OF THIRD-COUNTRY NATIONALS TO LITHUANIA: RECENT TRENDS AND SOCIAL POLICY RESPONSES.
- Author
-
Brazienė, Rūta, Mamaiev, Dmytro, and Aksu, Suat
- Subjects
- *
SOCIETAL reaction , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL policy , *LABOR market , *HUMAN rights - Abstract
The purpose of the paper is to discuss recent immigration trends, and the policies that have been adopted by the state to facilitate the process of the integration of immigrants and their access to the labour market. The first part of the paper discusses theoretical aspects of migration, and labour migration in particular. The second part of the paper is aimed at disclosing current immigration trends among third-country nationals in Lithuania. Labour migration and the migration policy framework in Lithuania are analysed, as are integration policies. The research results reveal that Lithuania lacks an effective migrant integration policy. The evaluation of the migration policy index allows us to conclude that the policy of the integration of immigrants is the area of migration policy that needs to be improved the most in Lithuania. Lithuania’s score is lower than the average MIPEX country score, and together with Latvia it is one of the lowest in Central and East European countries. Lithuania’s approach to integration is classified by MIPEX as equality on paper. While immigrants enjoy basic rights and protection in Lithuania, they do not enjoy equal opportunities to participate in society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. Carl Menger's Smithian contributions to German political economy.
- Author
-
Kolev, Stefan and Dekker, Erwin
- Subjects
GERMAN colonies ,CHANGE theory ,SOCIAL policy ,NINETEENTH century ,POLITICAL agenda - Abstract
In this paper we contextualize Carl Menger's work in relation to the transformations of German political economy from the 1860s to the 1890s. We demonstrate that his Grundsätze (1871) was a culmination of the German subjectivist tradition which had started in the early nineteenth century. Menger's synthesis of this tradition is comparable to Adam Smith's synthesis of earlier knowledge in the Wealth of Nations (1776). Menger's contribution was continuous with the intellectual project of leading German economists, such as Wilhelm Roscher, to whom Menger had dedicated his book. Roscher, however, also promoted a historical turn, that was combined with a progressive policy agenda by a new generation of German economists after they founded the Verein für Socialpolitik in 1872. These divergent Roscherian legacies clashed vehemently in the Methodenstreit. During this debate Menger elaborated in his Untersuchungen (1883) an evolutionary and spontaneous theory of institutional change, in line with the legacy of the Scottish Enlightenment and in contrast to a more rationalist and constructivist theory of institutional change expounded by Gustav Schmoller and other Verein economists. The new policy-oriented direction of German political economy carried the day, also due the fundamental socio-economic transformations in the German and Austro-Hungarian Empires, and prompted Menger to restate in 1891 the social policy agenda of the classical political economists, most prominently Smith. Menger's recurrent proximities to Smithian political economy – in the synthetic contribution of 1871, the theoretical innovation of 1883, and the policy agenda of 1891 – suggest that his arguments are best understood as a defense of what Boettke has called the "mainline" in economics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Strategic Messaging to Promote Policies that Advance Racial Equity: What Do We Know, and What Do We Need to Learn?
- Author
-
NIEDERDEPPE, JEFF, LIU, JIAWEI, SPRUILL, MIKAELA, LEWIS, NEIL A., MOORE, STEVEN, FOWLER, ERIKA FRANKLIN, and GOLLUST, SARAH E.
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,ONLINE information services ,STRATEGIC planning ,SOCIAL support ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,RACIAL inequality ,PRIMARY health care ,QUALITY assurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TEXT messages ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Policy PointsMany studies have explored the impact of message strategies to build support for policies that advance racial equity, but few studies examine the effects of richer stories of lived experience and detailed accounts of the ways racism is embedded in policy design and implementation.Longer messages framed to emphasize social and structural causes of racial inequity hold significant potential to enhance support for policies to advance racial equity.There is an urgent need to develop, test, and disseminate communication interventions that center perspectives from historically marginalized people and promote policy advocacy, community mobilization, and collective action to advance racial equity. Context: Long‐standing racial inequities in health and well‐being are shaped by racialized public policies that perpetuate disadvantage among Black, Brown, Indigenous, and people of color. Strategic messaging can accelerate public and policymaker support for public policies that advance population health. We lack a comprehensive understanding of lessons learned from work on policy messaging to advance racial equity and the gaps in knowledge it reveals. Methods: A scoping review of peer‐reviewed studies from communication, psychology, political science, sociology, public health, and health policy that have tested how various message strategies influence support and mobilization for racial equity policy domains across a wide variety of social systems. We used keyword database searches, author bibliographic searches, and reviews of reference lists from relevant sources to compile 55 peer‐reviewed papers with 80 studies that used experiments to test the effects of one or more message strategies in shaping support for racial equity–related policies, as well as the cognitive/emotional factors that predict their support. Findings: Most studies report on the short‐term effects of very short message manipulations. Although many of these studies find evidence that reference to race or use of racial cues tend to undermine support for racial equity–related policies, the accumulated body of evidence has generally not explored the effects of richer, more nuanced stories of lived experience and/or detailed historical and contemporary accounts of the ways racism is embedded in public policy design and implementation. A few well‐designed studies offer evidence that longer‐form messages framed to emphasize social and structural causes of racial inequity can enhance support for policies to advance racial equity, though many questions require further research. Conclusions: We conclude by laying out a research agenda to fill numerous wide gaps in the evidentiary base related to building support for racial equity policy across sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Not all risks are equal: a risk governance framework for assessing the water SDG.
- Author
-
Koehler, Johanna Karolina Louise
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL organization ,RISK perception ,SOCIAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
While it becomes apparent that the sustainable development goal for water will likely not be met by 2030, the first UN Water Conference in almost half a century has produced a large number of non-binding commitments and pledges, thus falling short of closing the global governance gap that is widening through climate change. This article adopts a risk governance perspective and provides reflections and recommendations on the need for coordination, critical evaluation, integration and a deeper understanding of risk perceptions and responses related to the water SDG across public, private and civil society actors. Drawing on van Asselt and Renn, the paper proposes a water risk governance framework applying the principles of communication and inclusion, integration, and reflection, to assessing progress toward the water SDG. Focusing on the transformation of water services, it discusses who is represented, whose risks are perceived and responded to, and who is responsible for providing evidence and scaling innovation. It concludes that for scaling up four elements are necessary, including institutional innovation, financing mechanisms, monitoring, as well as social and policy uptake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Krisenspezifische Solidarität. Der Stellenwert wohlfahrtstaatlicher Solidarität in Krisenzeiten.
- Author
-
Börner, Stefanie and Sasse-Zeltner, Ulrike
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,WELFARE state ,SOCIAL policy ,LEGISLATORS ,STAY-at-home orders - Abstract
In diesem Beitrag wird der krisenspezifische Einfluss der Covid-19-Pandemie auf wohlfahrtsstaatliche Solidarität während der ersten Infektionswelle und des ersten Lockdowns von März bis Mai 2020 untersucht. Wir verknüpfen dabei ein wohlfahrtsstaatssoziologisches Verständnis von Solidarität mit katastrophensoziologischen Überlegungen zu krisenspezifischer Solidarität und einer differenzierungstheoretischen Sichtweise auf Institutionenwandel. Mittels einer strukturierenden Inhaltsanalyse der Bundestagsplenarprotokolle wird ein innerparlamentarischer Solidarisierungsdruck nachgezeichnet, der zu einer krisenspezifischen Vergemeinschaftung führt. Durch die qualitative Analyse der Parlamentsdebatten verdeutlichen wir zudem die temporäre Begrenzung dieses Zusammenhangs, der nach erfolgreicher Rekonstitution einer gemeinsamen normativen Basis der Parlamentsmitglieder die Wiederaufnahme von parteipolitischen Solidaritätskonflikten erst ermöglichte. Auf einer weiteren Ebene arbeiten wir die Stabilisierungsfunktion von wohlfahrtsstaatlicher Solidarität als abstrakter normativer Leitidee heraus, die auch in konflikthaften Aushandlungen von sozialpolitischen Maßnahmen ihre Wirkung entfaltet. This paper examines the crisis-specific impact of the Covid 19 pandemic on welfare state solidarity during the first wave of infection and the first lockdown from March to May 2020. We combine a sociological understanding of solidarity in the context of the welfare state with sociological reflections on crisis-specific solidarity and a differentiation-theoretical perspective on institutional change. By means of a structuring content analysis of the Bundestagsplenarprotokolle, an intra-parliamentary solidarity pressure is traced that leads to crisis-specific Vergemeinschaftung. Through the qualitative analysis of the parliamentary debates, we also clarify the temporary limitation of this connection, which made the resumption of party-political solidarity conflicts possible in the first place after the successful reconstitution of a common normative basis of the members of parliament. On a further level, we elaborate the stabilizing function of welfare state solidarity as an abstract normative guiding idea (Leitidee), which also exerts its effect in conflictual negotiations of social policy measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Labour market dualization, permanent insecurity and fertility: The case of ultra-low fertility in South Korea.
- Author
-
Fleckenstein, Timo, Lee, Soohyun Christine, and Mohun Himmelweit, Samuel
- Subjects
LABOR market ,FERTILITY - Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between labour market dualization, insecurity and low fertility, through a case study of South Korea, an extreme case of ultra-low fertility where the total fertility rate fell to 0.84 in 2020. It is argued that the long-term nature of the insecurity associated with dualization, as well as its impact on people's perceptions of present and future insecurity, mark dualization out as a particular phenomenon whose impact on fertility current demographic approaches struggle to fully understand. Rather than restricting the focus to the education-employment transition, we show how permanent insecurity in highly dualized labour markets depresses fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Against Imperial Social Policy: Recasting Mkandawire's Transformative Ideas for Africa's Liberation.
- Author
-
Phiri, Madalitso Zililo
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,LIBERTY ,NEOLIBERALISM ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
Forty years have passed since the implementation of the pernicious neoliberal structural reforms on the African continent in 1981. If 2021 marked a 40-year commemoration of a diabolical neocolonial project such as neoliberalism, then the year 2020 signified another 40-year period of rebirth aborted, as the Lagos Plan of Action of 1980 was undermined in favour of the Berg Report of 1981. These two periodizations delineate African liberation or continued neocolonial oppression, yet also coincide with Thandika Mkandawire's life's strivings. How do Mkandawire's ideas on social policy, inspired by radical African Nationalists, aid in the dismantling of contemporary forms of racialized neoliberal social policy making? Mkandawire's life straddled two 40-year periods (1940–1980 and 1980–2020) marked by sui generis contributions to African and global social sciences. This paper recasts his scholarly contributions on transformative social policy as a prophetic theoretician of African liberation. Mkandawire's scholarly corpus provides a programmatic approach to the unmaking of a hierarchical racialized neoliberal global order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Rurality and social innovation processes and outcomes: A realist evaluation of rural social enterprise activities.
- Author
-
Steiner, Artur, Calò, Francesca, and Shucksmith, Mark
- Subjects
SOCIAL innovation ,SOCIAL processes ,SOCIAL enterprises ,RURALITY ,RURAL conditions ,SOCIAL policy ,RURAL poor - Abstract
Although increasingly prominent in research, policy and practice, little is known about social innovation in a rural context. To address this knowledge gap, our paper explores how rurality might affect the social innovation process. Drawing on 68 interviews carried out with beneficiaries, service providers and external stakeholders of a rural social enterprise initiative in Scotland, the paper adopts a realist evaluation theory (Pawson and Tilley, 1997) approach combined with Calò et al.'s (2019) social innovation analytical framework to identify Context-Mechanism-Outcome configurations for rural social innovation. The findings highlight that specific characteristics of rural places can act as stimuli of social innovation. Positive outcomes of a social innovation can potentially be rooted in rural peculiarity and its problematic context. Push factors, born out of necessity, lead to reactive social innovation and pull factors, derived through harnessing perceived opportunities in the environment, lead to proactive social innovation. Importantly, push factors do not undermine the establishment of social innovation – indeed, they can actually promote social innovation and strengthen its validity. The paper also shows that outcomes of the social innovation process might not be specific to rural areas. Instead, the pathway to the desired outcomes is conditioned by rural factors, shaping the contexts and mechanisms of rural social innovation. As different rural locations might have different resources to address local challenges, social innovation processes vary from one case to another, although the challenges being addressed might be similar. As such, rural social innovation policies should not be 'over prescribed'. Context creates both challenges and solutions and influences the type and form of mechanisms used to achieve a desirable social innovation outcome. • Rural places can act as stimuli of social innovation. • Positive outcomes of a social innovation are frequently rooted in rural peculiarity. • Push factors can promote rural social innovation strengthening its validity. • Rural social innovation policies should not be 'over prescribed'. • Rural context influences the mechanisms used to achieve social innovation outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. School autonomy reform and social justice: a policy overview of Australian public education (1970s to present).
- Author
-
MacDonald, Katrina, Keddie, Amanda, Blackmore, Jill, Mahoney, Caroline, Wilkinson, Jane, Gobby, Brad, Niesche, Richard, and Eacott, Scott
- Subjects
SCHOOL autonomy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,SOCIAL justice ,PUBLIC education ,SOCIAL policy - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the policies of school autonomy in Australian public education from the Karmel report in 1973 to the present day. The key focus is on the social justice implications of this reform. It tracks the tensions between policy moves to both grant schools greater autonomy and rein in this autonomy with the increasing instatement of external forms of regulation. Utilising Nancy Fraser's concepts of dis-embedding and re-embedding markets, we track key policy moments in three Australian states (Victoria, Western Australia and New South Wales) along with federal interventions. We draw attention to the redistributive and representative justice implications arising from these policy moments as occurring within a consistent trajectory towards a market agenda and argue that future policy needs to consider the effect of past policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.