Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Preface
- Glossary
- Notes on contributors
- one ‘Active’ citizenship: the new face of welfare
- two The goals of social policy: context and change
- three Which way for the European social model: minimum standards or social quality?
- four The advent of a flexible life course and the reconfigurations of welfare
- five Citizenship, unemployment and welfare policy
- six Paradoxes of democracy: the dialectic of inclusion and exclusion
- seven Citizenship and the activation of social protection: a comparative approach
- eight The active society and activation policy: ideologies, contexts and effects
- nine Individualising citizenship
- ten Gender equality, citizenship and welfare state restructuring
- eleven New forms of citizenship and social integration in European societies
- twelve The outcomes of early retirement in Nordic countries
- thirteen The role of early exit from the labour market in social exclusion and marginalisation: the case of the UK
- fourteen The emergence of social movements by social security claimants
- fifteen Conclusion: policy change, welfare regimes and active citizenship
- Index
fifteen - Conclusion: policy change, welfare regimes and active citizenship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Preface
- Glossary
- Notes on contributors
- one ‘Active’ citizenship: the new face of welfare
- two The goals of social policy: context and change
- three Which way for the European social model: minimum standards or social quality?
- four The advent of a flexible life course and the reconfigurations of welfare
- five Citizenship, unemployment and welfare policy
- six Paradoxes of democracy: the dialectic of inclusion and exclusion
- seven Citizenship and the activation of social protection: a comparative approach
- eight The active society and activation policy: ideologies, contexts and effects
- nine Individualising citizenship
- ten Gender equality, citizenship and welfare state restructuring
- eleven New forms of citizenship and social integration in European societies
- twelve The outcomes of early retirement in Nordic countries
- thirteen The role of early exit from the labour market in social exclusion and marginalisation: the case of the UK
- fourteen The emergence of social movements by social security claimants
- fifteen Conclusion: policy change, welfare regimes and active citizenship
- Index
Summary
In the 1990s, there was a widespread belief in the inertia of the welfare state. In contrast, we now observe quite far-reaching changes in welfare policies, and several possible directions seem to be open for tomorrow's welfare states. In brief, we are in the midst of a thoroughgoing reform of welfare systems. Welfare policies are changing in response to new challenges, new actors and changing power relations. We also face new discourses about welfare that are disseminated across the rich welfare states.
Current conceptualisations and explanations of welfare state change are not always very helpful for analysing these often quite ambiguous changes. In the first place, explanations of changes have tended to focus too much on the problems of cost containment or competitiveness, failing to acknowledge other sources of change. Secondly, they have seen change too one-sidedly as a matter of retrenchment and failed to recognise that current changes also involve the expansion of social rights. Furthermore, the criteria used to assess change depend too much on the welfare state architecture that developed in the second half of the 20th century; in particular, they usually focus too narrowly on the state versus the market dichotomy, and too much on cash transfers rather than services. Finally, analyses of change often put too much emphasis on formal institutions and too little on outcomes.
Although analyses and interpretations along these lines have provided valuable insights, we must find a new vantage point for looking at the reforms under way and devise new standards of measurement for assessing current reforms and their eventual effects. In this book, we have suggested as a starting point for this analysis a broader notion of societal change; we have suggested assessing welfare reforms mainly from an outcome perspective and we have suggested focusing on the effects of such reforms on citizenship – while acknowledging at the same time that citizenship itself is being redefined.
Challenges and change: beyond retrenchment
During the 1990s, following Pierson's (1994) pioneering work, welfare state reform was mainly seen in terms of retrenchment. This view highlighted economic pressures as the major cause of change and provided extremely valuable insights into the politics of blame avoidance.
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- Information
- The Changing Face of WelfareConsequences and Outcomes from a Citizenship Perspective, pp. 257 - 272Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2005