
European welfare states are undergoing profound change, driven by globalization, technical changes, and population ageing. More immediately, the aftermath of the Great Recession and unprecedented levels of immigration have imposed additional pressures. This book examines welfare state transformations across a representative range of European countries and at the EU level, and considers likely new directions in social policy. It reviews the dominant neo-liberal austerity response and discusses social investment, fightback, welfare chauvinism, and protectionism. It argues that the class solidarities and cleavages that shaped the development of welfare states are no longer powerful. Tensions surrounding divisions between old and young, women and men, immigrants and denizens, and between the winners in a new, more competitive, world and those who feel left behind are becoming steadily more important. European countries have entered a period of political instability and this is reflected in policy directions. Austerity predominates nearly everywhere, but patterns of social investment, protectionism, neo-Keynesian intervention, and fightback vary between countries. The volume identify areas of convergence and difference in European welfare state futures in this up-to-date study - essential reading to grasp the pace and directions of change.
This book investigates how European welfare states are adapting to the structural pressures of globalization, demographic shifts, and the economic aftermath of the Great Recession. The authors, Benjamin Leruth, Heejung Chung, and Peter Taylor-Gooby, utilize a comparative political economy framework to analyze how traditional class-based solidarities have eroded. They argue that contemporary social policy is increasingly defined by new cleavages between age groups, genders, and citizens versus immigrants, leading to a fragmented landscape of austerity, social investment, and protectionism.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a significant contribution to the study of contemporary European social policy and political instability. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the utility of its comparative framework for understanding current policy shifts.
Page Count:
243
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192507435
ISBN-13:
9780192507433
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