Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Europe and the politics of capabilities
- Part I Products, territories and economic activity in Europe
- Part 2 Assessing EU procedures and European initiatives
- Part 3 What politics of capabilities?
- 13 Capabilities, social rights and European market integration
- 14 Collective rights, deliberation and capabilities: an approach to collective bargaining in the Belgian retail industry
- 15 The gender settlement and social provision: the work – welfare relationship at the level of the household
- 16 Security and the working life: new perspectives
- 17 Social needs, development, territories and full employment based on solidarity
- 18 Incorporating the capability approach into social and employment policies
- Appendix 1 EU bibliography
- Appendix 2 Information on EU official documents
- Index
- References
13 - Capabilities, social rights and European market integration
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Europe and the politics of capabilities
- Part I Products, territories and economic activity in Europe
- Part 2 Assessing EU procedures and European initiatives
- Part 3 What politics of capabilities?
- 13 Capabilities, social rights and European market integration
- 14 Collective rights, deliberation and capabilities: an approach to collective bargaining in the Belgian retail industry
- 15 The gender settlement and social provision: the work – welfare relationship at the level of the household
- 16 Security and the working life: new perspectives
- 17 Social needs, development, territories and full employment based on solidarity
- 18 Incorporating the capability approach into social and employment policies
- Appendix 1 EU bibliography
- Appendix 2 Information on EU official documents
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
This chapter explores the potential for linking the economic notion of ‘capability’ to the juridical concept of social rights. The notion of capability which was developed first by Lancaster (1966) and then Sen (1985, 1999) in the context of welfare economics, has more recently come to prominence in the debate over European social and economic policy, as a result of its use in the Supiot report on the transformation of work and employment relations (Salais 1999; Supiot 1999). We will argue here that the particular importance of the capability concept lies in its potential to clarify the relationship between social rights and the market order, as expressed in the discourse of European integration.
We begin by revisiting T. H. Marshall's classic analysis of social rights and their ambiguous relationship to the market (Marshall [1949] 1992). We then introduce Sen's capability approach and discuss how far it provides a framework for locating social rights within a market setting. We argue that Sen's non-dogmatic, context-oriented approach to defining the meaning of capabilities offers a viable way forward for thinking about the current tension between market rights and social rights in the European Union. This argument is illustrated by reference to the role played by mechanisms of corporate social responsibility in promoting gender equality.
Social rights
‘Social rights’ are usually understood as claims on resources in the form of income, services or employment. In T. H. Marshall's classic and still influential formulation, social rights were distinguished from ‘civil’ and ‘political’ rights.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Europe and the Politics of Capabilities , pp. 205 - 221Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
References
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