The Development of welfare states in Europe and America
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Bibliographic Information
The Development of welfare states in Europe and America
Transaction, c1984
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume seeks to contribute to an interdisci-plinary, comparative, and historical study of Western welfare states. It attempts to link their historical dynamics and contemporary problems in an international perspective.
Building on collaboration between European-and American-based research groups, the editors have coordinated contributions by economists, political scientists, sociologists, and historians. The developments they analyze cover a time span from the initiation of modern national social policies at the end of the nineteenth century to the present.
The experiences of all the presently existing Western European systems except Spain and Por-tugal are systematically encompassed, with com-parisons developed selectively with the experi-ences of the United States and Canada. The devel-opment of the social security systems, of public expenditures!and taxation, of public education and educational opportunities, and of income inequal-ity are described, compared, and analyzed for varying groupings of the Western European and North American nations.
This volume addresses itself mainly to two audi-ences. The first includes all students of policy
problems of the welfare states who seek to gain a comparative perspective and historical under-standing. A second group may be more interested in the theory and empirical analysis of long-term societal developments. In this context, the growth of the welfare states ranges as a major departure, along with the development of national states and capitalist economies.
The welfare state is interpreted as a general phenomenon of modernization, as a product of the increasing differentiation and the growing size of societies on the one hand, and of processes of social and political mobilization on the other. It is an important element of the structural convergence of modern societies - by its mere weight in all countries - and at the same time a source of divergence by the variations within its institutional structure.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1: What Is the Welfare State?
- 1: The Historical Core and Changing Boundaries of the Welfare State
- 2: Why and How Welfare States Grew: Determinants and Variations
- 2: Modernization, Democratization, and the Development of Welfare States in Western Europe
- 3: The Development of Welfare States in North America
- 3: Social Security: The Importance of Socioeconomic and Political Variables
- 4: The Growth of Social Insurance Programs in Scandinavia: Outside Influences and Internal Forces
- 5: Government Responses to the Challenge of Unemployment: The Development of Unemployment Insurance in Western Europe
- 4: Economic Equality: The Distribution of Incomes
- 6: The Historical Development of Income Inequality in Western Europe and the United States
- 5: Educational Opportunities: Access to Education and Priorities in Welfare State Development
- 7: Educational Opportunities and Government Policies in Europe in the Period of Industrialization
- 8: Education and Social Security Entitlements in Europe and America
- 6: An End to Growth? Fiscal Capacities and Containment Pressures
- 9: Trends and Problems in Postwar Public Expenditure Development in Western Europe and North America
- 10: Leftism, Catholicism, and Democratic Corporatism:
- 11: Toward a New Welfare State?
by "Nielsen BookData"