2 research outputs found
The Experiences of Disadvantages and Discrimination Among the Tea Garden Workers in Bangladesh: An Overview
This paper aims to understand the experiences of disadvantages and discrimination among tea garden workers in Bangladesh. Based on the interviews of 75 tea garden workers, the paper identified few domains where they experience disadvantage and discrimination. The paper recommended government intervention and NGO and INGO initiatives to ensure educational opportunities for their children, provide healthcare facilities and increase wages for the garden workers. The paper has implications for the international community to ensure equitable society and social justice for the vulnerable and minority groups all over the world
Locating the welfare system of developing countries in the light of welfare regime models: The case of Bangladesh
The state, market, and families are the major players in mitigating human needs, though the state possesses fundamental responsibility about the redistribution process of the resources. However, the role of the state, market, and families varies among societies depending on the political ideology, economic strength, social structure and efficiency of the market. This paper examines the Esping-Andersen‟s analysis in the comparative social policy of today‟s world and its relevance to the emerging social protection approaches of the developing countries focusing on the welfare provisions of Bangladesh. The paper attempts to locate the pursuit of welfare system of Bangladesh in the light of welfare regimes model and concludes that Bangladesh has a distinct path dependency of welfare provisions which are not identical to the welfare regimes paradigm. The paper offers insight for the least developed and developing countries in understanding their welfare systems from the viewpoint of the regime approach