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Peter Baldwin (1990), 'Introduction: Welfare,. Redistribution and Solidarity'. 14. Nicholas Barr (2001), 'The Market and Information'. 15. Giuliano Bonoli (2005) ...
WELFARE STATES: CONSTRUCTION, DECONSTRUCTION, RECONSTRUCTION VOLUME l VOLUME ll VOLUME lll

Analytical Approaches Varieties and Transformations Legitimation, Achievement and Integration Edited by Stephan Leibfried and Steffan Mau

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VOLUME l

Analytical Approaches Edited by Stephan Leibfried, ‘Transformations of the State’ Collaborative Research Centre and Steffen Mau, Bremen International Graduate School of Social Sciences (BIGSSS), University of Bremen, Germany Volume I, Analytical Approaches, comprises a history of welfare state theory, with essays on modernisation, functionalism and the industrialisation thesis, neo-Marxist theories, the power resources approach, managing and sharing risks, and polity-centred and institutional approaches.

Welfare States: Construction, Deconstruction, Reconstruction In this three-volume collection Leibfried and Mau have gathered together the most vital articles about the welfare state and its ‘reformation’ written since the mid-1970s. Their choices and organising principles bring coherence and additional insight to these articles that, together, provide a comprehensive presentation of all the key empirical, conceptual and normative issues. Welfare States: Construction, Deconstruction, Reconstruction unites the work of some four generations of the most pre-eminent scholars of the welfare state – in one cohesive, authoritative set of volumes. 63 articles, dating from 1974 to 2005 Contributors include: N. Barr, F. Castles, G. Esping-Andersen, J.S. Hacker, P. Hall, E. Immergut, W. Korpi, J. Myles, C. Offe, P. Pierson, B. Rothstein

Three volume set Feb 2008 2,176 pp Hardback 978 1 84720 080 8 £495.00

Contents 10. Bob Jessop (2002), ‘Capitalism and the Capitalist Type of State’

Acknowledgements Introduction PART I

PART V

WELFARE STATE DEVELOPMENT: THE GRAND PERSPECTIVE

1. Ira Katznelson (1986), ‘Rethinking the Silences of Social and Economic Policy’ 2.

Edwin Amenta (2003), ‘What We Know about the Development of Social Policy. Comparative and Historical Research in Comparative and Historical Perspective’

THE POWER RESOURCES APPROACH

11. Walter Korpi (1983), ‘The Democratic Class Struggle’ and ‘Social Policy’ 12. Walter Korpi and Joakim Palme (2003), ‘New Politics and Class Politics in the Context of Austerity and Globalization: Welfare State Regress in 18 Countries, 1975–95’ PART VI

MANAGING AND SHARING RISK

3. John Myles and Jill Quadagno (2002), ‘Political Theories of the Welfare State’

13. Peter Baldwin (1990), ‘Introduction: Welfare, Redistribution and Solidarity’

PART II

14. Nicholas Barr (2001), ‘The Market and Information’

MODERNIZATION AND THE EXPANSION OF CITIZENSHIP

4. T.H. Marshall (1992 [1949]), ‘Citizenship and Social Class’ 5. Richard M. Titmuss (1974), ‘What is Social Policy?’ 6. Robert Henry Cox (1998), ‘The Consequences of Welfare Reform: How Conceptions of Social Rights Are Changing’ PART III

FUNCTIONALISM AND THE INDUSTRIALIZATION THESIS

7. Peter Flora and Jens Alber (1981), ‘Modernization, Democratization, and the Development of Welfare States in Western Europe’ 8. Harold L. Wilensky (1975), ‘The Welfare State as a Research Problem’ and ‘Economic Level, Ideology, and Social Structure’ PART IV

NEO-MARXIST THEORIES

9. Claus Offe (1984), ‘Social Policy and the Theory of the State’

15. Giuliano Bonoli (2005), ‘The Politics of the New Social Policies: Providing Coverage Against New Social Risks in Mature Welfare States’ PART VII

POLITY-CENTERED APPROACHES AND INSTITUTIONALISMS

16. Ann Shola Orloff and Theda Skocpol (1984), ‘Why Not Equal Protection? Explaining the Politics of Public Social Spending in Britain, 1900–1911, and the United States, 1880s–1920’ 17. Evelyne Huber, Charles Ragin and John D. Stephens (1993), ‘Social Democracy, Christian Democracy, Constitutional Structure, and the Welfare State’ 18. Ellen M. Immergut (1990), ‘Institutions, Veto Points, and Policy Results: A Comparative Analysis of Health Care’ 19. Jacob S. Hacker (2002), ‘The Politics of Public and Private Social Benefits’ 20. Bo Rothstein (1998), ’The Political and Moral Logic of the Universal Welfare State’ Name Index

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WELFARE STATES: CONSTRUCTION, DECONSTRUCTION, RECONSTRUCTION

VOLUME lI

Varieties and Transformations ‘Leibfried and Mau have done a stunningly good job finding just the right pieces on all the important topics. . . overall this is a truly excellent set.’ – Robert Goodin, Australian National University ‘Welfare States: Construction, Deconstruction, Reconstruction is the single most formidable compendium of welfare state writings that exists. The three volumes span all the main disciplines and the entire range of theoretical and empirical issues of relevance. It will, no doubt, become the point of reference for teaching and research alike. Leibfried and Mau must be congratulated for an Opus Magnum that is unrivalled in comprehensiveness and quality.’ – Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Volume II, Varieties and Transformations, begins with articles defining varieties of welfare states and then proceeds with essays on welfare state retrenchment and its roots, globalisation, post-industrialism, Europeanisation, and global social policy.

Contents

12. Sven Steinmo (2002), ‘Globalization and Taxation: Challenges to the Swedish Welfare State’

Acknowledgements An introduction by the editors to all three volumes appears in Volume I

PART IV

PART I 1.

VARIETIES OF WELFARE STATES

Gøsta Esping-Andersen (1990), ‘The Three Political Economies of the Welfare State’, ‘De-Commodification in Social Policy’ and ‘The Welfare State as a System of Stratification’

POST-INDUSTRIALISM

13. Gøsta Esping-Andersen (1999), ‘The Structural Bases of Postindustrial Employment’ 14. Torben Iversen and Anne Wren (1998), ‘Equality, Employment, and Budgetary Restraint: The Trilemma of the Service Economy’ PART V

EUROPEANIZATION

2. Giuliano Bonoli (1997), ‘Classifying Welfare States: A Two-dimension Approach’

15. Wolfgang Streeck (2000), ‘Competitive Solidarity: Rethinking the European Social Model’

3. Francis G. Castles and Deborah Mitchell (1993), ‘Worlds of Welfare and Families of Nations’

16. Claus Offe (2003), ‘The European Model of “Social” Capitalism: Can it Survive European Integration?’

4. Sven E.O. Hort and Stein Kuhnle (2000), ‘The Coming of East and South-East Asian Welfare States’

17. Herbert Obinger, Stephan Leibfried and Francis G. Castles (2005), ‘Bypasses to a Social Europe? Lessons from Federal Experience’

5. Peter A. Hall and David Soskice (2001), ‘An Introduction to Varieties of Capitalism’ PART II

RETRENCHMENT

6. Paul Pierson (1996), ‘The New Politics of the Welfare State’ 7. Paul Pierson (2001), ‘Coping with Permanent Austerity: Welfare State Restructuring in Affluent Democracies’ 8.

Richard Clayton and Jonas Pontusson (1998), ‘Welfare-State Retrenchment Revisited: Entitlement Cuts, Public Sector Restructuring, and Inegalitarian Trends in Advanced Capitalist Societies’

9. Vivien A. Schmidt (2002), ‘Does Discourse Matter in the Politics of Welfare State Adjustment?’ PART III

GLOBALIZATION

10. Geoffrey Garrett (1998), ‘Global Markets and National Politics: Collision Course or Virtuous Circle?’ 11. Elmar Rieger and Stephan Leibfried (1998), ‘Welfare State Limits to Globalization’

PART VI

GLOBAL SOCIAL POLICY

18. Bob Deacon with Michelle Hulse and Paul Stubbs (1997), ‘The Prospects for Global Social Policy’ 19. Geof Wood and Ian Gough (2004), ‘Conclusion: Rethinking Social Policy in Development Contexts’ Name Index To place an order: Please contact: Marston Book Services Limited PO Box 369 * Abingdon * OXON * OX14 4YN * UK Tel: +44 1235 465500 Fax: +44 1235 465555 Email: [email protected] Website: www.marston.co.uk For more information or to request a free catalogue: The Sales and Marketing Department Edward Elgar Publishing Limited Glensanda House * Montpellier Parade * Cheltenham Glos * GL50 1UA * UK Tel: +44 1242 226934 Fax: +44 1242 262111 Email: [email protected] Website: www.e-elgar.com

WELFARE STATES: CONSTRUCTION, DECONSTRUCTION, RECONSTRUCTION

VOLUME lII

Legitimation, Achievement and Integration ‘An awe-inspiringly wide-ranging collection of articles covering different aspects of the welfare state, different policy issues, and different analytical approaches. A must for anyone who is interested in a multidisciplinary approach to thinking about the welfare state.’ – Nicholas Barr, London School of Economics, UK Volume III, Legitimation, Achievement and Integration addresses the issues and challenges of the contemporary welfare state: its justification, economic results and entanglements, human public motivations and attitudes, multiculturalism, gender,the generational contract.

Contents Acknowledgements An introduction by the editors to all three volumes appears in Volume I PART I REASONS FOR WELFARE 1. John Rawls (1986), ‘Distributive Justice’ 2. Robert E. Goodin (1988), ‘Introduction’ 3. Nancy Fraser (1990), ‘Talking about Needs: Interpretive Contests as Political Conflicts in Welfare-State Societies’ PART II 4.

OUTCOMES

Walter Korpi and Joakim Palme (1998), ‘The Paradox of Redistribution and Strategies of Equality: Welfare State Institutions, Inequality, and Poverty in the Western Countries’

5. Lane Kenworthy (1999), ‘Do Social-Welfare Policies Reduce Poverty? A Cross-National Assessment’ 6. Timothy M. Smeeding (2005), ‘Public Policy, Economic Inequality, and Poverty: The United States in Comparative Perspective’ PART III

TRADE OFFS AND DYSFUNCTIONS

7. Lane Kenworthy (2003), ‘Do Affluent Countries Face an Incomes–Jobs Trade Off?’ 8. Assar Lindbeck and Dennis J. Snower (2001), ‘Insiders versus Outsiders’ 9. Assar Lindbeck (1997), ‘The Swedish Experiment’

14. Wim van Oorschot (2000), ‘Who Should Get What, and Why? On Deservingness Criteria and the Conditionality of Solidarity Among the Public’ 15. Martin Gilens (1996), ‘“Race Coding” and White Opposition to Welfare’ PART VI

ETHNIC AND SOCIAL DIVERSITY

16. Robert C. Lieberman (2002), ‘Political Institutions and the Politics of Race in the Development of the Modern Welfare State’ 17. Keith G. Banting (2000), ‘Looking in Three Directions: Migration and the European Welfare State in Comparative Perspective’ 18. Keith G. Banting and Will Kymlicka (2004), ‘Do Multiculturalism Policies Erode the Welfare State?’ PART VII

GENDER

19. Ann Orloff (1996), ‘Gender in the Welfare State’ 20. Jane Lewis (2002), ‘Gender and Welfare State Change’ 21. Haya Stier, Noah Lewin-Epstein and Michael Braun (2001), ‘Welfare Regimes, Family-Supportive Policies, and Women’s Employment Along the Life-Course’ PART VIII

PENSIONS AND THE GENERATIONAL CONTRACT

22. Karl Hinrichs (2001), ‘Elephants on the Move. Patterns of Public Pension Reform in OECD Countries’ 23. John Myles (2002),‘A New Social Contract for the Elderly?’

10. Lawrence M. Mead (1997), ‘Citizenship and Social Policy: T.H. Marshall and Poverty’

24. Martin Kohli (1999), ‘Private and Public Transfers Between Generations: Linking the Family and the State’

PART IV

Name Index

HUMAN MOTIVATION AND THE WELFARE STATE

11. Julian Le Grand (1997), ‘Knights, Knaves or Pawns? Human Behaviour and Social Policy’ 12. Alan Deacon and Kirk Mann (1999), ‘Agency, Modernity and Social Policy’ PART V

PUBLIC SUPPORT AND WELFARE ATTITUDES

13. Stefan Svallfors (1997), ‘Worlds of Welfare and Attitudes to Redistribution: A Comparison of Eight Western Nations’

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