Childhood, generational order and the welfare state : exploring children's social and economic welfare

Bibliographic Information

Childhood, generational order and the welfare state : exploring children's social and economic welfare

Helmut Wintersberger ... [et al.], eds

(COST A19: Children's welfare, v. 1)(University of Southern Denmark studies in history and social sciences, v. 337)

University Press of Southern Denmark, 2007

  • : [pbk.]

Available at  / 3 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

So far, research on the welfare state has usually neglected children and childhood. In the rare attempts to include childhood in welfare state analysis, too much emphasis was placed on children as future adults. However, only a full recognition of children as human beings and citizens here and now are compatible with new social studies of childhood as well as children's rights discourses. Thus the conceptual integration of children and childhood in the welfare state is still an open question. The present book tries to close this gap by offering the concept of generational order as theoretical tool to both childhood and welfare state research. In analogy to gender analysis, this concept is an adequate tool for making the adultist bias of traditional welfare state theories and practices visible. Authors of 10 predominantly European countries explore in 11 chapters issues of children's social and economic welfare such as child poverty in a theoretical methodological and practical perspective. Together with volume 2, "Flexible Childhood", this book is the final result of COST Action A19, Children's Welfare, which has been supported by the European COST Framework.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Theorising Children's Welfare
  • Whose Children? Families and Children in "Activating" Welfare States
  • Welfare States and Generational Order
  • Some Problems in the International Comparison of Child Income Poverty
  • Child Poverty in the U.S.: A New Family Budget Approach with Comparison to European Countries
  • Child Benefit Packages in 22 Countries
  • Negotiating Child Poverty: Children's Subjective Experiences of Life on a Low Income
  • Children's Rights to a Decent Standard of Living
  • Working Children and the 'Descholarisation' of Childhood
  • Age Order and Children's Agency
  • European Childhood - Diverging or Converging?

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-2 of 2

Details

Page Top