86 research outputs found

    Recent Changes in European Welfare State Services: A Comparison of Child Care Politics in the U.K., Sweden, Germany, and the Netherlands. CES Germany & Europe Working Papers, No. 07.6, 1997

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    This paper examines recent policies and politics of services, in particular child care services in European welfare states. It is argued that social (care) services are becoming an increasingly political issue in postindustrial societies and are at the very center of welfare-state restructuring. Some countries have recently developed new policy pro­ grams for child care-but there are important differences among these programs. To understand these differences as well as some common features, the paper argues that it is necessary to examine the institutional organization of child care and short-term political factors as well as the rationales articulated in political debates to support or im­ pede various policies. The paper concludes that a comprehensive system of child care provisions is still far off in most countries, despite a rhetoric of choice and postindustrial care and labor-market patterns

    Beginselen in de politiek?

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    Gender and the separation of spheres in twentieth century Dutch society: Pillarisation, welfare state formation and individualisation

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    The separation of public and private spheres has been an important issue in feminist scholarship. The concept of separability, and the gender relations assumed, made women second-class citizens and reinforced the belief that women were ‘incomplete citizens’ or ‘citizens manqué’. The idea of separate spheres was shared by most political movements in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. Pillarisation generated a system of political negotiation that focused on reaching consensus at the top-level of the different pillars. Individualisation is a concept used to describe an array of political, social and moral developments which have resulted in the breakdown of pillarisation. Labour market and social security policies only constitute a portion of the Dutch welfare system. The postwar welfare state has also provided a number of social services, including ones directed at the development of social citizenship. The histories of pillarisation and welfare state formation are characterised by substantial interventions into family life, either directly or indirectly

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    The Economic and Social Significance of Creativity

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    Dat wekt vertrouwen

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    Thema zorginnovatie

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