Throughout the world, governments are restructuring social and welfare provision to give a stronger role to opportunity, aspiration and individual responsibility, and to competition, markets and consumer choice. This approach centres on a logic of individual rational action: people are the best judges of what serves their own interests and government should give them as much freedom of choice as possible. The UK has gone further than any other major European country in reform and provides a useful object lesson.
This book analyses the pressures on social citizenship from changes in work and the family, political actors, population ageing, and the processes within government in the relentless international process of globalization that have shaped the response. It examines the various social science approaches to agency and argues that the logic of rational action is able to explain how reciprocity arises and is sustained but offers a weak foundation for social inclusion and social trust. It will only sustain part of the welfare state. A detailed assessment of empirical evidence shows how the outcomes of the new policy framework correspond to its theoretical strengths and limitations. Reforms have achieved considerable success in delivering mass services efficiently. They are much less successful in redistributing to more vulnerable low income groups and in maintaining public trust in the structure of provision.
The risk is that mistrustful and disquieted voters may be unwilling to support high spending on health care, pensions and other benefits at a time when they are most needed. In short, the reform programme was undertaken for excellent reasons in a difficult international context, but risks throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
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Throughout the world, governments are restructuring social and welfare provision.This book analyses the pressures on social citizenship from changes in work and the family, political actors, an ageing population, and a general backdrop of globalization. It goes on to provocatively critique government's main policy responses.
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PART I SUSTAINING SOCIAL CITIZENSHIP IN DIFFICULT TIMES ; 1. Social Citizenship Under Pressure ; 2. Globalisation: New Constraints on Policy-Making ; 3. The Response of Government ; PART II INTELLECTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF REFORM ; 4. The Assumptive World of Welfare State Reform ; 5. Individual Choice and Social Order ; 6. Rational Actors and Social Citizenship ; PART III A CASE-STUDY: THE UK AS OBJECT LESSON ; 7. Putting the Theory into Practice: the UK Experience ; 8. The NHS Reforms as a Response to First-Order Challenges ; 9. Second-Order Challenges: Disenchantment, Disquiet and Mistrust ; PART IV CONCLUSIONS: STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS OF RATIONAL ACTOR APPROACHES ; 10. Globalisation, Inequality and Diversity ; 11. Welfare Under Altered Circumstances ; Bibliography ; Index
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Provocative new contribution from a leading analyst of the welfare state
Analysis and critique of the main direction in current social policy reform
Highly relevant to political and policy debates about what governments should do in this field
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Peter Taylor-Gooby is Professor of Social Policy at the University of Kent and Director of the ESRC Social Contexts and Responses to Risk network. He is a Founding Academician at ALSiSS, a Fellow of the RSA, recent President of the Sociology and Social Policy Section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Co-director of the Risk Research Centre, Beijing Normal University and Chair of the Social Policy and Social Work Research Assessment
Exercise Panel.
Les mer
Provocative new contribution from a leading analyst of the welfare state
Analysis and critique of the main direction in current social policy reform
Highly relevant to political and policy debates about what governments should do in this field
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199546701
Publisert
2008
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
517 gr
Høyde
241 mm
Bredde
161 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
232
Forfatter