31 research outputs found

    The Social Stratification of Social Risks: Class and Responsibility in the 'New' Welfare State

    Get PDF
    Welfare states are said to have evolved over the course of the past twenty years towards a ā€˜social investmentā€™ model of welfare, characterised by a focus on equality of opportunity and upward social mobility combined with greater emphasis on individual responsibility. More or less concurrently, under the mantra of ā€˜individualisationā€™, scepticism has grown with regard to the relevance of traditional stratification schemes. This paper sets out to ascertain whether social class, i.e. intergenerational background, (still) affects the occurrence of ā€˜social risksā€™. Using SILC 2005 data, it considers the impact of social class (of origin) on a relevant selection of social risks: unemployment, ill-health, living in a jobless household, single parenthood, temporary employment, and low-paid employment. The results provide clear evidence of a continuing influence of social class. On this basis, we argue that a one-sided focus on individual responsibility could open the door to new forms of marginalisation.Ireland, Austerity, Fiscal Policy, Monetary Policy

    Inequalities' Impacts: State of the Art Review

    Get PDF
    By way of introduction This report provides the ļ¬ rm foundation for anchoring the research that will be performed by the GINI project. It subsequently considers the ļ¬ elds covered by each of the main work packages: ā— inequalities of income, wealth and education, ā— social impacts, ā— political and cultural impacts, and ā— policy effects on and of inequality. Though extensive this review does not pretend to be exhaustive. The review may be ā€œlightā€ in some respects and can be expanded when the analysis evolves. In each of the four ļ¬ elds a signiļ¬ cant number of discussion papers will be produced, in total well over 100. These will add to the state of the art while also covering new round and generating results that will be incorporated in the Analysis Reports to be prepared for the work packages. In that sense, the current review provides the starting point. At the same time, the existing body of knowledge is broader or deeper depending on the particular ļ¬ eld and its tradition of research. The very motivation of GINIā€™s focused study of the impacts of inequalities is that a systematic study is lacking and relatively little is known about those impacts. This also holds for the complex collection of, the effects that inequality can have on policy making and the contributions that policies can make to mitigating inequalities but also to enhancing them. By contrast, analyses of inequality itself are many, not least because there is a wide array of inequalities; inequalities have become more easily studied comparatively and much of that analysis has a signiļ¬ cant descriptive ļ¬‚ avour that includes an extensive discussion of measurement issues. @GINI hopes to go beyond that and cover the impacts of inequalities at the same time

    Decreased Doublecortin (DCX) immunoreactivity in hippocampus after profound sensorineural hearing loss and vestibular dysfunction in adult mice

    Get PDF
    Objective: sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and bilateral vestibulopathy (BV) have been associated with cognitive decline and incident dementia. Our aim was to investigate the combined effect of profound SNHL and BV on spatial cognition and hippocampal neurogenesis in adult mice. Methods: Single oral intake of allylnitrile produces otovestibular failure in less than a week. Behavioral assessment included recording of spontaneous activity, motor activity, spatial cognition, etc. Evaluation of hippocampal neurogenesis was performed 8 weeks after treatment by quantification of neural precursor cells and proliferating cells in the dentate gyrus by staining with doublecortin (Dcx) and Ki67, respectively. Results: Profound SNHL and BV were confirmed in the allylnitrile-treated mice respectively by means of auditory brainstem response (ABR) and acoustic startle response, and several vestibular tests. Spatial cognitive deficits, i.e. higher latency to target, were observed with the Barnes maze. In the right hemisphere, no statistically significant difference was observed between groups. In the left hemisphere, the difference in mean cell densities of Dcx positive cells was statistically significant when compared to the control group, whereas the difference in mean cell density of Ki67 positive cells did not differ significantly. Conclusion: Spatial cognitive deficits and decreased immunoreactivity to DCX in the left hippocampus were observed 8 weeks after adult mice acquired profound SNHL and BV
    corecore