Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgement
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction: social policy concepts and language
- one Social policy language in Denmark and Sweden
- two The changing language of social policy in Hungary and Polan
- three Languages of ‘social policy’ at ‘the EU level’
- four The OECD's search for a new social policy language: from welfare state to active society
- five The discursive power of international organisations: social policy language and concepts in the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
- six Original and imitated or elusive and limited? Towards a genealogy of the welfare state idea in Britain
- seven Social policy concepts and language in France
- eight The language of social politics in Finland
- nine Germany: constructing the ‘win-win’ society
- ten Conceptual development of welfare and social policy in Japan
- eleven Transition to the ‘universal’ welfare state: the changing meaning of ‘welfare state’ in Korea
- twelve The Dutch ‘caring state’
- thirteen Panacea, problem or perish: social policy language in New Zealand
- fourteen Evolving social policy languages in Spain: what did democracy and EU membership change?
- fifteen Social policy language in the United States
- Conclusion: comparative perspectives on social policy language
- Index
seven - Social policy concepts and language in France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 March 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgement
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction: social policy concepts and language
- one Social policy language in Denmark and Sweden
- two The changing language of social policy in Hungary and Polan
- three Languages of ‘social policy’ at ‘the EU level’
- four The OECD's search for a new social policy language: from welfare state to active society
- five The discursive power of international organisations: social policy language and concepts in the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
- six Original and imitated or elusive and limited? Towards a genealogy of the welfare state idea in Britain
- seven Social policy concepts and language in France
- eight The language of social politics in Finland
- nine Germany: constructing the ‘win-win’ society
- ten Conceptual development of welfare and social policy in Japan
- eleven Transition to the ‘universal’ welfare state: the changing meaning of ‘welfare state’ in Korea
- twelve The Dutch ‘caring state’
- thirteen Panacea, problem or perish: social policy language in New Zealand
- fourteen Evolving social policy languages in Spain: what did democracy and EU membership change?
- fifteen Social policy language in the United States
- Conclusion: comparative perspectives on social policy language
- Index
Summary
This volume explores the politics and history of social policy language and concepts. A country associated with both universalism and a unique Republican political culture, France is an interesting case for the analysis of social policy language because of the contested nature of the very concepts that help define what social policy is about. Another reason to turn attention to France is the influence of this country on international policy debates, within the European Union and beyond. For instance, the concept of social exclusion, which has now entered the international policy vocabulary, first emerged as a ‘keyword’ in France, before it was diffused through international policy networks (Beland, 2007). Thus, the French case is fascinating in part because it allows us to understand the specific nature of national policy debates while acknowledging their international dimension.
This chapter is comprised of four main sections. The first two sections respectively explore the development of the concepts of sécurité sociale and État-providence in France. These sections each trace the history of one of these concepts, before explaining why is has become politically contentious. The last two main sections delve into the French Republican political culture and discourse to explore the ideas of solidarity and social exclusion, respectively. The chapter’s Conclusion stresses some basic lessons drawn from the French case for the broad analysis of social policy language and concepts.
Social security
Popularised in the United States during and after the New Deal, the term ‘social security’ (Sécurité sociale) became an enduring ‘keyword’ (Williams, 1976; see also Fraser and Gordon, 1994) in France's social policy language in the aftermath of the 1944 Liberation. At the time, the 1942 Beveridge report (Social Insurance and Allied Services) motivated what became a failed attempt to unify the fragmented social insurance system that had emerged in France during the first decades of the 20th century (for example Hatzfeld, 1971; Rosanvallon, 1981; Baldwin, 1990; Palier and Bonoli, 1995). In France, the term ‘social security’ typically refers to the social insurance schemes central to the French social policy system. In a textbook on ‘social security’, for instance, Georges Dorion and Andre Guionnet (1995: 14) enumerate the key components of that fragmented system: health insurance, parental leave, disability insurance, death insurance, workers’ compensation, old-age insurance and family benefits.
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- Analysing Social Policy Concepts and LanguageComparative and Transnational Perspectives, pp. 143 - 156Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2014