69,096 results on '"Public Welfare"'
Search Results
2. National-scale 1-km maps of hospital travel time and hospital accessibility in China.
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Ye, Pei, Ye, Ziqian, Xia, Jizhe, Zhong, Leiyang, Zhang, Mei, Lv, Lu, Tu, Wei, Yue, Yang, and Li, Qingquan
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TRAVEL time (Traffic engineering) ,HOSPITAL size ,PUBLIC welfare ,WATERSHEDS ,HEALTH equity - Abstract
Ensuring equitable access to health services is crucial for public welfare and social equity, and is a key objective of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, existing datasets often define hospital accessibility using travel time to hospitals in geographic dimension only, without considering the supply (hospital capacity) and demand (population distribution) dynamics. To overcome this limitation, we developed and validated a national-scale 1 km map of both hospital travel time and hospital accessibility in China. We used the Gaussian two-step floating catchment area (Ga2SFCA) model to calculate hospital accessibility, incorporating hospital capacity and service population. Various file types and statistical indicators are provided, making the dataset highly accessible for non-specialists. The dataset fills the gap in publicly available nationwide hospital accessibility data for China and can serve as a critical tool in optimizing resource allocation and developing targeted strategies to improve healthcare equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Risk assessment of goaf instability based on a variable weight model.
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Guo, Linning, Hou, Kepeng, Sun, Huafen, Yang, Yong, Tan, Yuye, and Yin, Pengfei
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MONTE Carlo method ,PUBLIC safety ,PUBLIC welfare ,DATA distribution ,GAME theory - Abstract
Goaf instability poses significant hazards, affecting mine safety and public welfare. This study aims to evaluate the risk of goaf instability to enhance safety measures in mining operations. Thirteen key indicators were identified to construct a comprehensive evaluation index system. By integrating game theory, we combined subjective and objective weights to develop a constant weight model, which was subsequently improved by considering data distribution characteristics to develop a local variable weight model. The variable weight intervals were determined through cumulative frequency analysis of normalized factor indices, and the Monte Carlo method was employed to define weight adjustment parameters. Using the cloud model, we assessed the instability risk of goafs. Our results indicate that the variable weight model provides higher evaluation accuracy compared to the constant weight model, offering clearer and more distinguishable membership degrees for the evaluation outcomes, suggesting its potential for more precise risk assessments in mining operations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Frontline Worker Discretion in the For‐Profit Banking Industry: Lessons From Early Pandemic Relief Programming.
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Wood, Anna K. and Friedline, Terri
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CORONAVIRUS Aid, Relief & Economic Security Act (U.S.) , *PUBLIC welfare , *GOVERNMENT policy , *BANKING industry , *LOANS - Abstract
ABSTRACT In April and May 2020, the United States banking industry approved over $650 billion in federal relief funds as part of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). Since then, extensive evidence of discriminatory lending has been revealed by investigative journalism and academic studies. Our study is based on 41 interviews with frontline banking professionals conducted during the days and weeks of the PPP rollout. We find that under the crisis conditions of the pandemic, capped funds in the PPP and built‐in incentives that encouraged certain types of loans, banking employees relied upon the professional norms and logic of the for‐profit sector. We argue that these norms and logics threatened the integrity of the PPP as a public relief programme by applying profit‐oriented priorities to resources marked for universal and fair distribution. Our findings offer new directions for theorising sector‐level differences in street‐level bureaucratic discretion in the context of mixed‐sector collaboration on public service delivery, particularly under conditions of crisis and urgency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Institutional pedagogy and the transformation of residential care for, and with, disabled citizens.
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Cautreels, Dries, Remmery, Matthias, Benoot, Toon, Roose, Rudi, and Roets, Griet
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RESIDENTIAL care , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRESSURE groups , *CORPORATE culture , *WELFARE state , *DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION - Abstract
Abstract\nPoints of interestIn this article, we build upon a historical and critical analysis of de-institutionalisation strategies, representing a fundamental shift in disability policy and practice starting in the 1960’s. We state that de-institutionalisation has commonly been interpreted and translated as a vital ‘transition’ – referring to the dismantling of residential care and institutions – in rights discourse, policy, and (self-) advocacy. Whereas de-institutionalisation currently often interferes with neo-liberal welfare state reforms, we argue that the focus on ‘transition’ tends to ignore controlling and oppressive institutional care cultures that circulate in a variety of settings, whether ‘community based’ or not. In this article, we elaborate on Francois Tosquelles’ Institutional Pedagogy as a theoretical framework to radically ‘transform’ (residential) care in a wide variety of settings. Our analysis is based on qualitative interviews with residential care providers and (self-) advocacy groups, and offers a more in-depth insight in the complexities of de-institutionalisation as ‘transformation’.The common interpretation of de-institutionalisation states that large institutions for citizens with a disability need to be dismantled. It is claimed that institutions should be replaced by care and support in society to realise human rights for all.The article examines how closing down institutions hasn’t changed institutional ways of thinking, like oppressive and controlling ways of acting. It also has not facilitated inclusive relations. We state that de-institutionalisation should also focus on transforming the culture of residential institutions, no matter where this care and support are organised.The article uses a theory of Francois Tosquelles, Institutional Pedagogy, to rethink and transform institutions.The research builds on interviews with board members of care organisations that are changing, and with (self-) advocacy groups in Flanders.The article describes the need to transform residential institutions in a radical way. After all, residential care might still be the choice or last resort for citizens with a disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. The comparative politics of solidarity: Political party discourse across three welfare state regimes.
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Luypaert, Anouk and Thijssen, Peter
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POLITICAL manifestoes , *SOCIAL norms , *COMPARATIVE government , *PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *SOLIDARITY - Abstract
Party political conflict plays an essential role in shaping welfare policies, while they are simultaneously also shaped by these policies. As political parties grapple with the wicked challenges of our times, new forms of solidarity and solidarity conflicts arise across welfare regimes. Despite their significance, these dynamics have not received much recent attention. Our article aims to fill this gap. Through content analysis of party manifestos, we compare the solidarity frames of political parties within and between three distinct welfare regimes—Flanders (Belgium), Sweden, and the United States. Our results confirm our expectations drawn from political feedback literature: while party ideology influences parties' solidarity frame preferences and solidarity conflicts between parties, these preferences and conflicts are also influenced by a welfare regime's societal solidarity norms. Our article highlights the value of analyzing solidarity frames and political solidarity conflicts within welfare‐state regimes to better understand welfare politics and policies. Related Articles: König, Pascal D. 2015. "Moral Societal Renewal or Getting the Country Back to Work: Welfare State Culture as a Resource and a Constraint for Policy Discourse." Politics & Policy 43(5): 647–78. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12130. Mioni, Michele, 2021. "The 'Good Citizen' as a 'Respectable Worker:' State, Unemployment, and Social Policy in the United Kingdom and Italy, 1930 to 1950." Politics & Policy 49(4): 913–39. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12425. Wagle, Udaya R. 2014. "The Heterogeneity Politics of the Welfare State: Changing Population Heterogeneity and Welfare State Policies in High‐Income OECD Countries, 1980‐2005." Politics & Policy 41(6): 947–84. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12053. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Weakly institutionalized, heavily contested: Does support for contemporary welfare reforms rely on norms of distributive justice?
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Van Hootegem, Arno, Abts, Koen, and Meuleman, Bart
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SOCIAL security , *GOVERNMENT policy , *INSTITUTIONAL care , *SOCIAL justice , *DEBATE , *RESEARCH funding , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL norms , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PUBLIC opinion , *SURVEYS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PUBLIC welfare , *PRACTICAL politics , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Three reforms each appealing to a different logic of (re)distribution are strongly politicized in contemporary welfare states: means-tested benefits, demanding activation policies and basic income schemes. While the policy design of means-tested benefits relies on the distributive justice principle of need, demanding activation policies are intrinsically related to the principle of equity and basic income schemes depend on equality. Based on the moral economy and policy feedback literatures, which assume that public opinion adapts to the normative conceptions of justice encapsulated by institutions, attitudes towards these welfare reforms are expected to be grounded on these distributive logics. However, as these reforms are weakly institutionalized and their underlying principles are politically contested, the normative foundation of their public support remains unclear. This study investigates how distributive justice preferences shape support for these proposals by applying structural equation modelling on data from the CRONOS panel linked to the European Social Survey round 8 (2016/2017). Results indicate that only basic income schemes and demanding activation policies are to some extent connected to each of the justice principles. Overall, this study nevertheless indicates that the justice principles have limited explanatory power, which confirms that attitudes towards contemporary welfare reforms rely weakly on justice norms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Discrimination in marketized welfare services: a field experiment on Swedish schools.
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Larsson Taghizadeh, Jonas and Adman, Per
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PROPRIETARY health facilities , *ELEMENTARY schools , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PUBLIC sector , *FACTORIAL experiment designs , *SEX distribution , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *MARKETING , *PRIVATE sector , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *FIELD research , *SCHOOL admission , *ARABS , *PUBLIC welfare , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
Providers' tendency to cream skim clients according to certain sociodemographic traits is widely believed to increase under marketization, and therefore also discrimination. However, due to a lack of experimental research, little is known about the presence of discrimination in marketized welfare services and of the potential drivers of such biased treatment. The lack of research is particularly evident in regard to socioeconomic status (SES) discrimination and publicly financed for-profit providers. Moreover, competition, an important aspect of marketization, has not been investigated. Focusing on the interesting case of the Swedish school sector, we aim to improve knowledge on these matters. In a field experiment, 3,430 elementary school principals were randomly contacted though e-mail by parents with Arabic- or Swedish-sounding names and in low- or high-socioeconomic professions. The fictional parents were interested in placing their children at the school. The Swedish school sector resembles marketized public services in several Western countries. The results show clear signs of ethnic as well as SES discrimination, particularly in regard to more qualitative aspects of the replies. However, we find no significant differences in discrimination between public and private/for-profit schools and depending on the degree of competition in the school market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The Effect of Social Benefit Reform on Educational Inequality.
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Trinh, Nhat An
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SOCIAL security , *HIGH schools , *GOVERNMENT policy , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *ELEMENTARY schools , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL mobility , *LABOR market , *ELIGIBILITY (Social aspects) , *ACADEMIC achievement , *FAMILY structure , *PUBLIC welfare , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *SOCIAL classes , *WELL-being , *SOCIAL stigma , *POVERTY - Abstract
Cross-country research argues that the design of welfare states and social protection systems shapes the intergenerational transmission of inequality. Studies that examine this relationship within a country are however lacking from the literature. Based on a quasi-experimental research design using difference-in-differences estimation and data from the Socio-Economic Panel, I analyse whether the educational disadvantage of children of long-term unemployment assistance recipients increased after changes to eligibility criteria, benefit levels, and conditionality were introduced in Germany in 2005. I find that differences in the probability to enter the academic secondary school track between children of parents receiving long-term unemployment assistance one year before the transition and children of parents not receiving unemployment or social benefits increased by 13 percentage points. In part, this was driven by the introduction of means-testing that changed the composition of unemployment assistance recipients. However, further decreases in the financial conditions of these already disadvantaged families following reductions in benefit levels appear as the main driver of the observed effect. Changes in parental subjective wellbeing due to increased benefit conditionality and stigma do not seem to play a significant mediating role. The findings highlight the important contribution of social policy to social mobility and equality of opportunity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. The Rise and Fall of Social Housing? Housing Decommodification in Long-run Comparison.
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Kholodilin, Konstantin Arkadievich, Kohl, Sebastian, and Müller, Florian
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PUBLIC housing -- Law & legislation , *SOCIAL security , *GOVERNMENT policy , *ENDOWMENTS , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HOME ownership , *FAMILIES , *PUBLIC welfare , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC health , *CONSTRUCTION industry - Abstract
The comparative study of housing decommodification lags behind classical welfare state research, while housing research itself is rich in homeownership studies but lacks comparative accounts of private and social rentals due to missing comparative data. Building on existing works and various primary sources, this study presents a new collection of up to forty-eight countries' social housing shares in stock and new construction since the first housing laws around 1900. The interpolated benchmark time series generally describes the rise and fall of social housing across a residual, a socialist, and a Northern-European housing group. The decline was steeper than for the classical welfare state, but the degree of erosion was surprisingly small in some countries where public housing associations remained resilient. Within the broader housing welfare state, social housing correlates positively with rent regulation and allowances, but negatively with homeownership subsidies and liberal mortgage regulation. A multivariate analysis shows that social housing is rather explained by housing shortages and complementarities with rental and welfare policies than by typical welfare state theories (GDP, political parties). Generally, the paper shows that conventional housing typologies are difficult to defend over time and argues more generally for including housing decommodification in welfare state research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. 'You had to be the Detective': Implementing Workfare in British Employment Services.
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Redman, Jamie, Fletcher, Del Roy, White, Richard, and Mccarthy, Lindsey
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INTELLECT , *GOVERNMENT policy , *WORK environment , *PROFESSIONS , *FRONTLINE personnel , *PUBLIC welfare , *EMPLOYMENT , *LEGAL compliance - Abstract
British employment service delivery has shifted towards a model primed on core 'workfare' objectives – that is, enforcing behavioural compliance to work-related duties and expanding participation in work. Nevertheless, significant gaps remain in current knowledge about how workfare is implemented daily by frontline staff. The existing international street-level research on employment service delivery reveals how workers use a range of discretionary practices to achieve workfare objectives. Yet this research largely ignores how, in practice, a key aspect of enforcing behavioural compliance and encouraging work participation is through contending with its opposite – behavioural non-compliance. Analysing 13 interviews with frontline staff, this article contributes to street-level knowledge by revealing the ways managers and workers in British employment services are encouraged to detect and correct variations of claimant non-compliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Hyperflexing the horse's neck: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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König von Borstel, Uta, Kienapfel, Kathrin, McLean, Andrew, Wilkins, Cristina, and McGreevy, Paul
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PUBLIC welfare , *POSTURE , *DRESSAGE , *HORSES , *NECK - Abstract
The article reports a meta-analysis of 58 peer-reviewed studies investigating on dorsoventral hyperflexion of the neck in horses, a practice under substantial public and scientific scrutiny for the past two decades. The following databases were last searched on 28.05.2023: CAB, Google Scholar, Web of Science, NAL/Agricola, PubMed and ScienceDirect. After evaluating the conclusions of each study, we performed statistical analyses to establish a consensus on welfare and performance (performance marks, kinematics and musculoskeletal) outcomes in horses performing with a hyperflexed head and neck posture (HNP). The analysis revealed that a significant majority of the articles (75% of n = 36; Z = 3.00; P>|Z|=0.0027) expressed concerns about the welfare of horses working in this posture. Parameters such as dressage training level, prior experience, duration, and method of achieving the hyperflexed posture did not influence welfare concern conclusions significantly (P > 0.1). Therefore, it appears that the practice impairs welfare regardless of how it is imposed. A concurrent assessment of the weight of evidence for performance benefits showed inconclusive results: approximately one-quarter of the studies showed benefits and one-quarter detrimental effects, while the largest proportion (44%) showed no significant effect on performance. On balance, it appears that the costs associated with hyperflexed HNPs exceed potential benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Ideas and the changing relationship between states and markets in social policy: A review essay.
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Béland, Daniel and Mandelkern, Ronen
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PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC welfare policy , *SOCIAL policy , *SOCIAL marketing , *DISTRIBUTIVE justice - Abstract
This review essay takes stock of the recent literature about the role of ideas in social policy, with a particular focus on a key issue in social policy research: the changing interactions between states and markets over time. Specifically, our aim is to examine how the ideational literature discusses and explains prominent contemporary social policy evolutions: the rise of social investment and the financialization and technocratization of the welfare state. This is done based on the scholarship on state/market interactions and the role of ideas in social policy, and by utilizing key insights of scholars of ideational influences on state/market interactions. The article ends with a short agenda for future research on ideas and discourses as a crucial factor in the evolution of the welfare state as a key space in which states and markets interact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Evaluation of Slow-Releasing Energy Material (SREMA) Injection for In-Situ Rock Breaking Under Uniaxial and Triaxial Loading: An Experimental Study.
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Manatunga, U. I., Ranjith, P. G., De Silva, V. R. S., Xu, T., and Zhang, D.
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STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *MINING methodology , *ORE deposits , *STRESS fractures (Orthopedics) , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Permeability enhancement of impervious rock formations is crucial for the exploitation of ore deposits, which are uneconomic using conventional mining methods. These deposits have the potential to be mined with in-situ recovery (ISR) mining methods, provided the deposit's permeability is enhanced artificially. Slow-releasing energy material (SREMA) has been identified as a promising preconditioning technique to enhance rock permeability for ISR. However, the fracturing potential of SREMA in the presence of in-situ stresses remains under-explored in laboratory experimental research studies and needs to be assessed in detail prior to field trials. A unique confining cell was developed in this study to represent realistic confining stresses underground, and the impacts of different stress conditions on the fracturing potential of SREMA were investigated. In addition, the effects of SREMA expansion in pre-existing joints were also assessed using laboratory fracturing experiments conducted by injecting SREMA into sandstone specimens with artificially created horizontal persistent joints, which is the first attempt to the best of the author's knowledge. Under uniaxial stress conditions (10 MPa), multiple radial cracks emerged from the borehole at the centre of the specimen, while vertical splitting of the specimen was observed due to the outward expansion of SREMA inside the joint. In comparison, under triaxial confinement (5 MPa and 10 MPa), a decrease in the damage caused to the rock mass due to the expansive pressure generated by SREMA was observed, and this was overcome by introducing multiple injection holes and stress relief holes into the rock mass. Highlights: The SREMA charging of the borehole induces a multi-directional radial fracture pattern under higher uniaxial conditions. Less destruction was caused to the rock mass by SREMA charged borehole under triaxial stresses compared to the uniaxial conditions. SREMA charging of joints induces spalling of the specimen under uniaxial conditions due to the outward expansion of SREMA. SREMA charging induces tensile-dominated cracks under uniaxial conditions, while shear-dominated cracks are caused under triaxial conditions Stress relief holes aid in weakening the strength of rock mass under triaxial stress conditions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Social Protections and Climate Migration: Service Navigation among Puerto Ricans Displaced by Hurricane Maria.
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Hodges, James C, García, Maria F, Schwartz, Seth J, Vaughn, Michael G, Maldonado-Molina, Mildred M, Bates, Melissa, Calderón, Ivonne, Brown, Eric C, Rodríguez, José, and Salas-Wright, Christopher P
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QUALITATIVE research , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CLIMATE change , *INTERVIEWING , *CONTENT analysis , *COMMUNITIES , *JUDGMENT sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MIGRANT labor , *RESEARCH methodology , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUERTO Ricans , *SOCIAL support , *NATURAL disasters , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
As climate change continues to displace greater numbers of people, transnational ties are important sources of social protection for climate migrants. Migrants assemble unique configurations of formal and informal social protections depending on the resources available within their sending and receiving communities. However, the specific constellations of social protections that climate migrants use following disaster and displacement remain underexamined. Authors conducted semistructured interviews with Puerto Ricans who migrated in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria (N = 41) and used qualitative content analysis to trace the assemblages of formal and informal social protections used to navigate the resettlement process. Results suggest that informal support from migrants' transnational ties was instrumental in successfully making use of formal sources of support, including federal emergency relief programs, to leave the island and resettle on the U.S. mainland. This reliance on informal social protections often strained participants' informal networks and raised questions of equity for people internally displaced by climate change. These findings highlight the need for a more equitable and effective linkage of climate migrants with public resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. The politics of subnational social policy: Social consumption versus social investment in Austria.
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Walenta-Bergmann, Carmen and Wiß, Tobias
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GOVERNMENT policy , *INVESTMENTS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC administration , *POLITICAL participation , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Country comparisons, often suffering from unobserved heterogeneity and obscuring subnational variation, dominate the social policy literature. However, the subnational level is better suited to reduce the omitted variable bias. This article distinguishes between social consumption and social investment policies and investigates their determinants at the subnational level. Following the literature across countries, we test the role of incumbent parties' ideology, but for within-country variation in social policy. Austria is a case in point because states have discretion in social policy (e.g., regarding public childcare and social assistance). Panel regressions covering all nine states in Austria for the years 1991 to 2019 reveal that the cabinet share of Social-Democrats increases social investment spending, while the Christian-Democratic party decreases it, and the populist radical right party reduces expenses for social consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Does the (socio-political) socialization context matter for paternal involvement?
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Eichhorn, Thomas and Zerle-Elsäßer, Claudia
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CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *GOVERNMENT policy , *FATHERHOOD , *FATHERS' attitudes , *PARENTAL leave , *PARENTING , *FATHER-child relationship , *SOCIAL attitudes , *SOCIAL skills , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIALIZATION , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations - Abstract
Previous literature on paternal involvement emphasizes the influence of fathers' socialization contexts, considering either welfare policies (Hipp and Leuze, 2015) or experiences with their own fathers (Brown et al., 2018; Parke, 1995). In this study, we combine those two branches of research and examine how fathers' and their fathers' (grandfathers') socialization experiences (parental leave regulations in their early adulthood as an example of (de-)familization policies (Lohmann and Zagel, 2016)) predict paternal involvement today. To measure paternal involvement, we create an indicator for involvement that covers Lamb et al. (1985) three aspects of direct interaction, responsibility, and availability and the fact that a father has taken paternal leave for at least one of his children or not. We use the fact that a substantial proportion of the fathers in the German, national survey AID:A 2019 (Kuger et al., 2020) were socialized in another welfare state regime (6.3% of fathers have a direct and another 13.5% have an indirect migration background (their fathers were born in another country) covering birth cohorts from the 1970s to the 1990s; total N = 1053). We then add context-related information on their (fathers' and grandfathers') countries of origin from the OECD family database and estimate an SEM model to test potential direct and indirect effects. We find that more educated fathers who experienced extended parental leave regulations are more involved fathers today. Our results support, thus, that welfare state conditions influence individuals' behaviour while education is a relevant moderator in this relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Defamilization? Not for everyone. Unequal labour-market participation among informal caregivers in Europe.
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Laschinski, Miriam
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RESEARCH funding , *GOVERNMENT policy , *EQUALITY , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *FAMILIES , *LABOR market , *RESEARCH methodology , *MATHEMATICAL models , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *PUBLIC welfare , *THEORY , *PATIENT participation - Abstract
Growing care dependencies among the elderly due to population ageing in Europe challenge the labour-market participation of informal caregivers. While familiarized care regimes incentivize family caregiving by providing many cash-for-care-benefits, resulting in reduced labour supply, defamiliarized care regimes allocate more public spending to care infrastructure, alleviating the care responsibilities placed on family members. At the same time, care provision on the micro-level is distributed unequally across gender, age, and socioeconomic status. The question then emerges: Does the labour-market participation of informal caregivers vary between and within countries depending on the social-expenditure policy of welfare states? To answer this research question, a multilevel design was used, employing SHARE data and macro-indicators from OECD and Eurostat databases. The results reveal higher probabilities of labour-market participation for informal caregivers in general when social expenditures on formal care infrastructure are higher. However, labour-market participation was observed as being unequally distributed among the heterogeneous group of persons with and without caregiving duties. Women and individuals of lower socioeconomic status did not benefit from social expenditures in the same way as their counterparts, leading to lower levels of labour-market participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Why do some disadvantaged Australian families become homeless? Resources, disadvantage, housing and welfare.
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Hastings, Catherine
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HOMELESS families , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *CONSERVATION of natural resources , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Homeless families include children whose experiences of homelessness and extreme poverty can have long-term negative impacts over the life course. This paper proposes a resource-orientated causal explanation of the mechanisms of family homelessness in Australia. Given the critical role of poverty in housing insecurity, the model explains why some families living in extreme poverty and disadvantage become homeless and others do not. The research is positioned within a critical realist approach to theoretical causal explanation. It is influenced by interdisciplinary literature and psychologist Hobfoll's Conservation of Resources theory. Previously published empirical analysis informs and supports the development of this theoretical model. Families use their resources to mitigate challenges to their housing security. However, disadvantage limits their accumulation of resources, contributes to accelerating resource loss, and constrains their capacity to act. An acute lack of affordable housing and insufficient welfare payments to secure private rental accommodation severely impacts a family's capacity to navigate crises and avoid homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. The Legality of Labor and Perceptions of Deservingness of Rights and Services for Sex Workers.
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Powers, Ráchael A., Burckley, Jacquelyn, and Centelles, Vanessa
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SEX workers , *SEX work , *PUBLIC opinion , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
Access to social services like healthcare, education, housing, and welfare are integral to creating an equitable society. While many populations inherently benefit from these services, sex workers are often denied these rights and services because of the nature of their work. The purpose of this study was to examine perceptions of deservingness of sex workers for a wide range of rights and services. This study distinguished those attitudes across legal and illegal forms of sex work, identified attitudinal and demographic correlates associated with those perceptions, and examined potential interactions between respondents' gender and age. Participants included a nationwide sample of adults from the USA (n = 549). Results indicated that participants perceived legal sex work as more deserving of rights and services compared to illegal sex work. Perceptions of deservingness were associated with attitudes toward abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, and perceptions of government legitimacy. Overall, older individuals were less willing to extend rights and services to sex workers and women were more likely to perceive sex workers as deserving of rights and services. There was an interaction between gender and age. For illegal sex work, gender differences in perceptions converged as participants aged, whereas for legal sex work, gender differences were exacerbated with age, with men reporting particularly restrictive perceptions of deservingness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Is Redistribution Good for Our Health? Examining the Macrocorrelation between Welfare Generosity and Health across EU Nations over the Last 40 Years.
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Scruggs, Lyle, Fox, Ashley, and Reynolds, Megan M.
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CROSS-sectional method , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *RESEARCH funding , *LIFE expectancy , *HEALTH policy , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *STATISTICS , *PUBLIC welfare , *POVERTY , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Context: Social determinants of health are finally getting much-needed policy attention, but their political origins remain underexplored. In this article, the authors advance a theory of political determinants as accruing along three pathways of welfare state effects (redistribution, poverty reduction, and status preservation), and they test these assumptions by examining impacts of policy generosity on life expectancy (LE) over the last 40 years. Methods: The authors merge new and existing welfare policy generosity data from the Comparative Welfare Entitlement Project with data on LE spanning 1980–2018 across 21 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. They then examine relationships between five welfare policy generosity measures and LE using cross-sectional differencing and autoregressive lag models. Findings: The authors find consistent and positive effects for total generosity (an existing measure of social insurance generosity) on LE at birth across different model specifications in the magnitude of an increase in LE at birth of 0.10–0.15 years (p < 0.05) as well as for a measure of status preservation (0.11, p < 0.05). They find less consistent support for redistribution and poverty reduction measures. Conclusions: The authors conclude that in addition to generalized effects of policy generosity on health, status-preserving social insurance may be an important, and relatively overlooked, mechanism in increasing LE over time in advanced democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Part Discount Grocer, Part Social Connection: Defining Elements of Social Supermarkets.
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Pettman, Tahna Lee, Pontifex, Katherine, Williams, Carmel P., Wildgoose, Deborah, Dent, Carolyn, Fairbrother, Gavin, Chapman, James, Spreckley, Rory, Goodwin-Smith, Ian, and Bogomolova, Svetlana
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FOOD relief , *NONPROFIT sector , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL enterprises , *DISASTER relief - Abstract
The community sector performs an important function in providing emergency food relief, yet food insecurity is often a chronic issue due to poverty and social exclusion. Progressive food provision models present opportunities to improve voluntary food relief services that are dominant in many countries. Informed by research with clients indicating a preference for blended service models that go beyond food provision, two government agencies partnered with a social enterprise and academics to pilot a social supermarket model. This research article (a) briefly summarizes international evidence on social supermarkets' characteristics and offerings, (b) describes a process used to collaboratively develop a social supermarket incorporating universal access and social supports, and (c) presents a rubric defining elements of a social supermarket. Applicable to other community sector settings, the rubric emphasizes dignified access and service, plus opportunities for social support and connection, which are important elements in pathways out of food insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Inclusive Leadership to Address Discrimination and Improve Retention in Child Welfare: Examining Multiple Pathways.
- Author
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Zhou, Qi, Kim, Jangmin, and Semanchin Jones, Annette
- Subjects
- *
INCLUSIVE leadership , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL workers , *CHILD welfare , *RACE discrimination - Abstract
Inclusive leadership has been discussed as an effective approach to workforce retention and workplace racial discrimination by satisfying the demand for belongingness and uniqueness. However, scant research has investigated the relationship between inclusive leadership and retention in child welfare. Using survey data collected from child welfare workers (n = 2469) across three public child welfare agencies, the current study examined the direct impact of inclusive leadership on child welfare workers' intent to stay at their agency, as well as its indirect impact on intent to stay by influencing workplace racial discrimination. This study also explored the moderation effect of inclusive climate on the direct and indirect impacts of inclusive leadership using the PROCESS Program for SPSS. The research findings revealed that the direct and indirect impacts of inclusive leadership on intent to stay were significant. The findings also suggest that inclusive climate strengthened the positive association between inclusive leadership and intent to stay. Overall, this study demonstrated the potential of inclusive leadership to enhance racial equity and workforce retention in public child welfare systems. Future research needs to explore how specific behaviors of inclusive leaders improve workforce retention and explore other factors that could explain the impact of inclusive leadership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
24. Austerity Measures and the Resilience of Zimbabwe's Healthcare System: Challenges and Solutions.
- Author
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Chiwaridzo, Option Takunda
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RECESSIONS ,PUBLIC health infrastructure ,STATISTICAL correlation ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,PUBLIC officers ,MEDICAL personnel ,RESOURCE allocation ,MEDICAL quality control ,INCOME ,T-test (Statistics) ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,SOCIAL services ,AT-risk people ,RESEARCH evaluation ,COST analysis ,VALUE-based healthcare ,WORK environment ,QUANTITATIVE research ,WAGES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TAXATION ,JOB satisfaction ,GOVERNMENT programs ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RESEARCH ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH equity ,HEALTH care industry ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,FACTOR analysis ,PUBLIC welfare ,COMPARATIVE studies ,WELL-being ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Austerity measures have become a contentious topic, shaping the landscape of health care systems around the world. As governments grapple with economic challenges, the impact of austerity on health care has emerged as a critical concern. This study focuses on the consequences of austerity actions adopted by the Zimbabwean government under the Transitional Stabilization Program (TSP) from August 2018 to December 2025. This research examines the impact of austerity measures on Zimbabwe's health care sector, exploring its connections with health infrastructure and resources, accessibility and affordability of health care, health funding, health care inequalities, and the health care workforce. Using a quantitative approach and data from 970 participants, including the general populace, health care providers, and government officials, significant positive correlations between austerity measures and these health care variables were identified. The findings indicated a noteworthy positive correlation between the independent variable "austerity measures" and five dependent variables: health care accessibility and affordability, health care inequalities, infrastructure and resources, health care funding, and health care workforce. The t -statistics values exceeded the threshold of 1.96, with values of 5.085, 3.120, 6.459, 8.517, and 3.830, respectively. These findings highlight the importance of considering the effects of austerity on health care access, health funding, health care inequalities, health workforce, health infrastructure and resources development. Policymakers should prioritize equitable resource allocation and targeted investments to strengthen the resilience of the health care system during economic challenges. Understanding these associations is crucial for evidence-based policy decisions and fostering a more equitable and resilient health care system in Zimbabwe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Servicification of GVCs through deep service provisions: Uncovering new insights from structural gravity and machine learning.
- Author
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Sharma, Sharadendu, Arora, Rahul, and Gupta, Pralok
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GLOBAL value chains ,MACHINE learning ,PUBLIC welfare ,DIPLOMATIC & consular service ,REPAIR & maintenance services - Abstract
In recent decades, there has been a notable increase in linkages of services in decoupling global value chains (GVCs) and a surge in regulatory mechanisms embedded in service provisions in trade agreements. Existing literature tried to empirically link the impact of such service provisions on GVC‐related services, but none focused on identifying relevant service provisions. This study is a novel attempt in this direction using a machine learning algorithm augmented in gravity modelling. Building on the identified service provisions, the study quantifies their impact on GVC‐related services conditioned on the countries' income levels. The study also conducts the general equilibrium analysis by simulating a scenario incorporating identified service provisions in the India‐ASEAN trade agreement. The analysis finds that few service provisions exist that enhance the share of foreign service inputs in manufacturing exports of the countries involved in GVC‐related service participation. Moreover, the impact is heterogeneous regarding benefits to the developing countries as a destination of service‐value added. Finally, the study shows that introducing selected service provisions in existing trade agreements can potentially increase welfare and service trade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. 'Letting it be': a grounded theory about dementia care in Fiji.
- Author
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Johnston, Karen, Qaloewai, Sefanaia, Rasavuka, Taniela, Preston, Robyn, Strivens, Edward, and Larkins, Sarah
- Subjects
ELDER care ,MIDDLE-income countries ,QUALITATIVE research ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,JUDGMENT sampling ,CULTURAL values ,FAMILY attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,ATTITUDES toward mental illness ,RESEARCH methodology ,DEMENTIA ,GROUNDED theory ,SOCIAL support ,FAMILY support ,PUBLIC welfare ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,LOW-income countries ,DEMENTIA patients ,WELL-being - Abstract
Objectives: This research study aimed to discover how dementia affecting older people was perceived, experienced, and managed by stakeholders in the Pacific Island country of Fiji. Method: A transformational grounded theory approach was used. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups with key stakeholders in the major towns of Suva, Lautoka, and Nadi were carried out. Transcripts were analysed in line with transformational grounded theory methods. Results: A total of 50 participants (40 service providers, eight family caregivers, one person with dementia, and one village elder) shared their views and experiences about dementia. A grounded theory about dementia care management was constructed. 'Letting it be' is the grounding socio-cultural construct that interweaves and binds together the processes of dementia care management. It expresses a compassionate approach to caring for older people with dementia that involves searching for knowledge and support, and application of traditional care practices within the strength of family and community networks. Conclusion: In Fiji, support for dementia centres on the integration of community understandings, and promotion of cultural values of wellbeing and care, with service provision. It also focuses on support for families and communities through social welfare, community networks, and education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Harm Through Stigma: Commander Notification of Service Members’ Mental Health.
- Author
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Stalzer, Ana
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH Insurance Portability & Accountability Act , *MENTAL health services , *ETHICAL problems , *PUBLIC welfare , *CODES of ethics , *MILITARY ethics - Abstract
United States service members’ personal mental health information lacks the protection afforded by Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), diverging from the legal safeguards granted to other citizens. The Public Welfare Law and the Department of Defense (DoD) reduces these protections through clauses, outlining nine conditions where service members’ information can be disclosed to their commanders, who may lack formal HIPAA or medical confidentiality training. Once a commander is notified, the information may be shared with others without the Service Members consent, creating an unregulated spread of private health information. Additionally, the military environment, marked by a stigma surrounding mental health issues, compounds this vulnerability. Therefore, Service Members seeking mental health support may encounter adverse consequences upon returning to their command through the propagation of stigma, which may further foster a culture of reluctance to seek help. A fictional character within the military serves as a conduit for nonmilitary providers to understand the contextual intricacies while highlighting the ethical dilemma faced by providers adhering to Congressional law, American Psychological Association (APA) Ethics Code, and DoD standards while also serving their clients. Key ethical considerations include informed consent, disclosures, maintaining confidentiality, discussing the limits of confidentiality, avoiding harm, and conflicts between ethics and organizational demands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Robo‐compliance in Australian employment services.
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Casey, Simone
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC welfare , *UNEMPLOYMENT insurance , *EMPLOYMENT agencies , *SOCIAL security , *FINANCIAL security - Abstract
Since the late 1990s, Australia's employment services have enforced mutual obligation compliance as part of a transition to a disciplinary regime of conditional welfare. In recent years, the digitisation of employment services has extended the disciplinary approach to self‐activation. Notably, self‐activation extends mutual obligation requirements so that online reporting is a condition of benefit eligibility, or a digital obligation, enforced by threats to financial security in the form of automated payment suspensions. Guided by recent developments in the conceptualisation of digital welfare to work programs, case study analysis is used to explore the ways the technologies of self‐activation have changed the location of power in mutual obligation compliance decisions. This shift represents a move from street‐level decision making to Robo‐compliance. The article discusses the significance of this shift in the digital administration of disciplinary social policy in employment services. It highlights the need for further empirical research to explore this shift and how it affects individuals whose social security payments depend on interactions with these technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Fighting for menstrual equity through period product pantries.
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Glayzer, Edward J, Jennings, Claire T, Schlaeger, Judith M, Watkins, Brynn, Rieseler, Annabelle, Ray, Melissa, Lee, Adrienne, and Glayzer, Jennifer E
- Subjects
NONPROFIT organizations ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERVIEWING ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FEMININE hygiene products ,MENSTRUATION ,PUBLIC welfare ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH education ,CHARITIES ,POVERTY - Abstract
Background: Menstruators facing period poverty often struggle with menstrual hygiene and waste management, which can result in harmful short- and long-term health outcomes such as urinary tract infections, yeast infections, and vulvar contact dermatitis. Research indicates that 42% of menstruators in the United States have difficulty affording period products. Traditional methods of distributing period products through social services may unintentionally undermine menstruators' agency, leading to disempowerment and inefficient resource allocation. Period product pantries are a novel approach aimed at addressing period poverty, inequity, and inadequate menstrual health education in the United States. Objectives: This paper aims to examine the development, organization, and implementation of two distinct period product pantry networks in Ohio and New York. It seeks to compare the advantages and challenges of grassroots versus nonprofit-led models and to provide practical insights for future pantry operators. Design: The study examines two models of period product pantries: a grassroots effort led by three local residents in Ohio and an initiative spearheaded by a nonprofit organization in New York. The design includes a comparative analysis of both models' organization, funding methods, and operational structures. Methods: The authors gathered data on the construction, operation, and usage of two pantry networks, focusing on factors such as accessibility, community engagement, and sustainability. The study employed a combination of qualitative methods, including interviews with organizers, and a review of organizational documents to analyze the effectiveness and scalability of each model. Results: Both pantry networks increased accessibility to period products in low socioeconomic neighborhoods, which are disproportionately affected by period poverty. The grassroots model, while resource-limited, fostered strong community ties and local engagement. The nonprofit-led model benefited from dedicated staff and a more stable funding structure but faced bureaucratic challenges. Despite their differences, both models demonstrated the potential to empower menstruators by preserving their dignity and autonomy. Conclusions: Period product pantries represent an innovative and equitable approach to addressing period poverty and inequity. The analysis of the two models offers valuable insights for organizations and individuals interested in establishing similar initiatives. While each model has its unique benefits and challenges, both are effective in empowering menstruators and providing accessible menstrual hygiene products to those in need. Registration: Not applicable. Plain language summary: Fighting for menstrual equity through period product pantries Period product pantries are a new way to help people who can't afford period products and don't have enough education about menstrual health in the U.S. Many people who experience period poverty, or trouble getting products like pads and tampons, also face barriers to staying clean and managing period waste. This can cause health issues like infections. About 42% of people who get periods in the U.S. say they've had trouble paying for these products. Period product pantries are different from older methods of getting free products, like through social services, because they let people get what they need without feeling embarrassed or losing their sense of control. This paper looks at two types of period pantries: one started by three local people in Ohio and another run by a nonprofit group in New York. Both help people in neighborhoods where it's hard to afford period products. The paper talks about how these pantries were set up, how they are funded, and what worked well or didn't. The goal is to show how these pantries can be a good, fair way to help people while giving advice to others who might want to start their own pantries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. "الحماية القانونية لألطفال أثناء الن ازعات المسلحة في المواثيق الدولية والنظام السعودي"
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CHILD welfare ,PUBLIC welfare ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,REGIONALISM (International organization) - Abstract
Copyright of Arab Journal for Scientific Publishing is the property of Research & Development of Human Recourses Center (REMAH) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
31. The temporal and spatial interpretation of China's health financing: what do Chinese' government 'do' in new healthcare reform?
- Author
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Wang, Na
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs ,PUBLIC investments ,HEALTH care reform ,GOVERNMENT policy ,PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
Objective: The analysis of health expenditure and its structure takes on a critical significance in national health policy research, and the public welfare of national health undertakings can be manifested by the government's investment in health. In this study, the aim was to analyze total health care costs, the structure of health financing, and the government's investment in health, so as to provide a reference for China's health policy adjustment. Methods: Description and cluster analysis were conducted using R language to analyze total health care costs and the structure of health financing of 31 regions in China between 1990 and 2020 to gain insights into the temporal and spatial changes total health care costs and the structure of health financing in China. The government's investment in health was analyzed using description and abundance heatmap to know the temporal and spatial changes of the government's health investment. Results: The total health expenditure per capita reached 5112.3 yuan in 2020, and the total health expenditure accounted for 7.10% of GDP. The government health expenditure took up a significantly lower share of the total health expenditure in 1993–2006 (17.09% [16.30,17.88]), whereas it has been nearly 30% (29.56% [28.73,30.3]) over the past few years. As to 31 regions in China, the government health expenditure per total health expenditure reached 67.94% in Tibet, whereas a level of 27.866% (25.629–30.103) were maintained in other regions. Beijing and Shanghai have achieved over 50.00% of social health expenditure per total health expenditure in recent five years, it was significantly higher than other regions. The per capita government expenditure as a fraction of GDP of Tibet (6.842%) was the highest region in 2011–2019, while Jiangsu (only 0.937%) was the lowest region. Conclusions: Sustainable increases in total health expenditure as a percent of GDP take on a critical significance to adequate health financing. Equity in health financing has been insufficient in China, and spatial and temporal differences of China's health financing structure are significant. The region' governments should adjust policy based on typical regions to weaken the differences. Highlights: • Policy-oriented health systems is clear and firm in China's new healthcare reform. • Health financing structure tends to be consistent with international standards. • Equity in health financing has been insufficient, and spatial and temporal differences of China's health financing structure are significant. • The region' governments should adjust policy to weaken the differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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32. Can Social Policy Alleviate Loneliness Among Older Adults? A Comparative Analysis of OECD Countries.
- Author
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Oh, Seo Eun and Choi, Young Jun
- Subjects
- *
OLD age pensions , *LONELINESS , *SOCIAL impact , *OLDER people , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
Loneliness in old age is a multifaceted issue influenced by personal, social, and environmental factors, necessitating a holistic approach. However, most research has predominantly focused on individual-level risk factors, with limited attention given to institutional factors such as social policy. This study investigated how social policies impact loneliness among older adults. Multi-level analysis was conducted using data from the 2017 wave of International Social Survey Programme, involving 6,337 older adults from 23 OECD countries. The analysis revealed that higher public spending on welfare and old-age pensions significantly reduces the likelihood of loneliness among older adults. These findings confirm the protective role of generous social policies in addressing old-age loneliness. They underscore the need for long-term changes in welfare systems to enhance the public response to the significant social risk posed by old-age loneliness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Public welfare donation, rent sharing, and income gap within enterprises.
- Author
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Chen, Jiantao, Luo, Xiang, and Wang, Xiao
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *INCOME gap , *CORPORATE taxes , *PUBLIC welfare , *WAGES , *PER capita - Abstract
This study utilizes data from A-share listed companies between 2011 and 2020 to empirically investigate the impact and mechanism of public welfare donations on the internal income gap of enterprises. The research findings indicate that public welfare donations significantly increase the per capita salary of management, while their impact on the per capita salary of ordinary employees is not significant, thus leading to an expansion of the internal income gap within enterprises. The results from mechanism testing reveal that the income tax benefits resulting from charitable donations and the rise in corporate operating income have contributed to an increase in excess rent shared by enterprises and employees. Due to a stronger bargaining power, management shares more excess rents, thereby widening the income gap within the enterprise. Heterogeneity analysis demonstrates that public welfare donations have a greater impact on the internal income gap of non-state-owned enterprises; however, limiting executive compensation and enhancing employees' bargaining power can mitigate this widening effect caused by public welfare donations on enterprise's internal income gap. The research value of this study is threefold. Firstly, there is a scarcity of studies on the impact of public welfare donations on the income gap within enterprises, and this study contributes to enriching the research in this area. Secondly, this paper examines the effect of tax incentives for public welfare donations on the internal income gap of enterprises, thereby deepening the research on the impact of tax reduction and fee reduction, as well as expanding our understanding of corporate income tax preferential policies. Thirdly, it offers insights into improving enterprise compensation systems and enhancing corporate governance. Senior executives can potentially allocate more excess rent through their strong bargaining power. If their compensation remains unrestricted, it may lead to a widening internal income gap and negatively affect company operational efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Corporate (social) responsibility in state-business relations from the perspective of critical state theory: a historical case of early modern China.
- Author
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Kang, Xu
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,PUBLIC welfare ,BUSINESS planning ,CRITICAL theory ,POLITICAL elites - Abstract
This article presents a theoretical framework for analysing corporate responsibility through the lens of critical state theory, focusing on the dynamic interplay between state and business. Traditionally, corporate responsibility is seen as voluntary corporate actions for public welfare. However, it is increasingly viewed as integral to business strategy and subject to regulatory oversight. Utilizing Jessop's strategic-relational approach, this study underscores the state's role in structuring corporate behaviour, revealing how shifts in political elite networks influence corporate responsibility practices. A historical analysis of early modern China highlights these dynamics within specific national contexts characterized by developmentalism and authoritarianism, demonstrating the profound impact of state-business symbiosis on corporate responsibility. This analysis contributes to a deeper understanding of corporate responsibility in diverse political and economic settings, demonstrating how state power, corporate influence, and social welfare are mutually reinforcing and shaped by broader socio-political dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The state house prices make: the political elasticities of house prices and rents.
- Author
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Kohl, Sebastian and Wood, James D. G.
- Subjects
- *
HOME prices , *PRICE increases , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC investments , *FISCAL policy - Abstract
ABSTARCTFiscal policy allocation is not purely determined by the labour-capital conflict, but increasingly around cross-class housing coalitions. Although rising house prices are conventionally understood as drivers of fiscal austerity, this view has been challenged. Alternatively, governments may use fiscal policies to support house price growth to meet the primary economic interests of homeowners and compensate non-homeowners through the welfare system. Using an econometric analysis of 19 advanced economies between 1980 and 2018, we show house prices have positive effects on taxation revenue as well as fiscal spending on public investment, welfare and education. A second multi-level analysis provides a political explanation of this observed outcome by demonstrating parties respond to rising house prices by proposing more welfare and public investment spending in their manifestos. Conterminously rising house prices and rents also lead to greater welfare spending, suggesting governments use fiscal policy to protect those excluded from homeownership from labour market risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Australian Non-Resident Fathers' Relationship and Ongoing Engagement with Their Children: A Critical Focus on Power.
- Author
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Violi, Dominic, Lewis, Peter, Kwok, Cannas, and Wilson, Nathan J.
- Subjects
- *
FATHER-child relationship , *FALSE testimony , *FAMILY law courts , *PUBLIC welfare , *THEMATIC analysis , *FATHERS - Abstract
Non-resident fathers are rarely researched from a critical perspective. Becoming a non-resident father often results in major dislocation, presenting challenges and hindrances to a meaningful relationship with children. Dislocation is increased by the involvement of the family court, legal issues, false abuse allegations, and ex-partners. Changing family configurations may marginalize non-resident fathers, with their own perspectives, voices, and lack of power remaining largely unmapped. This paper identifies what hinders non-resident fathers' relationships with their children from a critical and Australian perspective. In-depth interviews using open-ended questions with 19 non-resident fathers were used to collect data, followed by a five-step critical thematic analysis to focus on the locus of power. Non-resident fathers' perceptions included a lack of agency and decision-making power; the mother, legal obstacles, and agencies hindered their desired relationships with children. Hindrances were magnified by descriptions of false allegations and IPV from the ex-partner and/or her agents, resulting in a sense of marginalization, silencing, and disempowerment. Australian non-resident fathers in this study identified that desired relationships with their children were hindered by the roles of legal and welfare services, policing, and their ex-partners. The highlighting of these issues points to ways that non-resident fathers with similar experiences of a lack of agency and decision-making power might be better supported by more streamlined and balanced legal processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Social welfare services in protracted displacement: When should state social workers cease to serve people displaced by war?
- Author
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Collado, Zaldy C
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL workers , *GOVERNMENT policy , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *SOCIAL justice , *SOCIAL services , *WAR , *PUBLIC welfare , *PUBLIC administration , *REFUGEES , *HUMANITARIANISM - Abstract
Internally displaced persons in protracted displacement may not receive optimal social work services. Governments must refrain from implicitly 'ending' displacement and uphold social care policies that really work for the displaced. By doing so, social work services become more sensitive and life-changing among people displaced for longer periods of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. News from our societies: ICSW – Towards the summit of the future.
- Author
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Zelenev, Sergei
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- *
HEALTH services accessibility , *DIVERSITY & inclusion policies , *SOCIAL cohesion , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *ECONOMIC impact , *PUBLIC welfare , *ORGANIZATIONAL goals , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article discusses the International Council on Social Welfare's (ICSW) vision and priorities for the upcoming Summit of the Future, scheduled for September 2024, within the context of Agenda 2030. Topics include the importance of intergenerational equity and social inclusion, the role of digital transformation in social development, and the need to address the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) financing gap to ensure equitable progress.
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- 2024
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39. Serving Chinese adolescents in the digital age: A grand challenge for social work.
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Liu, Weidi, Liu, Susu, and Ouyang, Zheng
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL technology , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *MEDICAL quality control , *QUALITATIVE research , *MEDICAL personnel , *SOCIAL workers , *RESEARCH funding , *DIGITAL health , *SOCIAL services , *MEDICAL care , *INTERVIEWING , *INFORMATION technology , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL case work , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *COMMUNICATION , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PUBLIC welfare , *COUNSELING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
In this article, a total of 22 social workers in Mainland China were interviewed to explore the effectiveness and challenges of providing services to adolescents using digital tools. By addressing the problems like permeable boundaries, perfunctory efforts, threats to implementation fidelity, and inefficient service delivery, we accordingly propose pragmatic recommendations to enhance digital social work practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. From Abstraction to Possibility? The Case of a New Constitutional Convention.
- Author
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Levinson, Sanford
- Subjects
- *
CONSTITUTIONAL conventions , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The author comments on two articles on the necessity of a new constitutional convention in the U.S. He explains his support for a new national constitutional convention. He examines the first paper in which the author contrasts the First and Second Amendments as instantiating two completely different visions of politics. He addresses several points raised in the second paper, including the positive value of social welfare guarantees listed in a constitutional text.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Buying a Wealthy Dream: Determinants of Rural Residents' Lottery Purchase Behavior in China.
- Author
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Ji, Yifan, Qiao, Dan, Hao, Ruiyan, Qin, Rongpeng, and Xu, Tao
- Subjects
- *
CONSUMER behavior , *INCOME , *SOCIAL stability , *ECONOMIC opportunities , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The expansion of illicit lottery activities has caused significant harm to both agricultural production and the livelihood of rural residents. An analysis of the factors that influence rural residents' participation in underground lotteries can provide crucial insight for regulating the lottery industry's development. This study examines the present state of rural residents' participation in underground lotteries, investigates the factors that impact their participation using the Double-Hurdle model, and further employs the ISM model to evaluate the correlations and hierarchical structure among the factors, using field survey data collected from 603 rural residents in S Province, China. The findings reveal that 53.07% of the respondents have participated in underground lotteries. Risk preference, information acquisition, social networks, age, education, family burden, percentage of agricultural labor, agricultural business scale, and household income significantly affect whether residents purchase lotteries (WPL). All factors, except the percentage of agricultural labor and agricultural business scale, also significantly impact underground lottery spending (LS). Among the significant influencing factors, rural residents' risk preference is the direct surface factor, whereas agricultural business scale, household income, information acquisition, and social networks are the middle indirect factors, and residents' age, education, family burden, and percentage of agricultural labor are the deep-rooted factors. It is recommended to regulate the lottery industry's development can be achieved by enhancing entertainment and cultural activities, expanding economic opportunities, enhancing rural education, increasing law awareness, and improving the public welfare lottery business model. The conclusions offer a valuable reference point for the standardized development of the lottery industry and the promotion of social stability in rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 返乡女性、非物质文化遗产产业化与乡村振兴: 基于贵州省台江县"妈妈制造"的实践
- Author
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龚卿民, 谭晓霜, and 邵利军
- Subjects
- *
RURAL development , *PUBLIC welfare , *NONPROFIT sector , *CULTURAL property , *FIELD research - Abstract
Addressing the re-employment problem for women returning to their hometowns in China is fundamental to implement the strategy of rural vitalization. The re-employment for female returnees is essential for promoting the harmonious development of local society and the local economic development in their hometowns. By reviewing the development history of intangible cultural heritage industrialization in Taijiang County, Guizhou Province, we have conducted field research on the Miao embroidery industry supported by the public welfare program "Mothers' Production", which mainly involves female returnees in this area. After sorting out the positive effects of "Mothers' Production" on female returnees'income, family care, participation in local affairs, cultural self-confidence, etc., we clarify the role of female returnees and "Mothers' Production" in promoting the social economy and cultural development of rural areas, aiming to provide a referential experience for linking the group of female returnees and the intangible cultural heritage industry to support rural revitalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. 后疫情时代药品专利强制许可制度的中国进路 --价值取向、制度框架与法律安排
- Author
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张淑亚 and 刘泓呈
- Subjects
- *
EXPORT controls , *PATENT licenses , *PUBLIC welfare , *RIGHT to health , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
It is very important to guarantee the supply of medicine under major public health crisis. Implementing compulsory licensing for pharmaceutical patents is an effective means to ensure the adequate supply of special patented medicines. To ensure the accuracy and effectiveness of the system implementation, the principle of subjectivity, the principle of public welfare and the principle of balance should be followed, and the classification framework of general compulsory license, special compulsory license and export compulsory license should be established. In the specific design of the system, the subject of application and the subject of initiation for compulsory license of pharmaceutical patent should be limited to any unit or individual. Additionally, the initiation cause, the initiation procedure and compensation standards should be further clarified, to ensure the effective implementation of the system under major public health crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Familienzentrierte Behandlungsansätze für drogenabhängige Eltern.
- Author
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Koopmann, Anne, Zimmermann, Ulrich S., and Moesgen, Diana
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL impact , *TREATMENT of addictions , *PUBLIC welfare , *PARENTHOOD , *SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Background: In Germany 1.5–2.75 million children live in families affected by substance use disorders. Substance abuse can impact on family interactions in many ways. If a dependent parental drug use continues over a longer period of time, this can have pronounced psychological and social consequences for the (co)affected children. Nevertheless, family-focused treatment approaches are not yet widely used in the context of addiction treatment. Aim: This review article aims to provide an overview of the prevalence of parenthood among dependent drug users in Germany, the impact of dependent drug use on families and family-focused treatment approaches. Methods and results: Recording parenthood is particularly difficult in the case of dependent drug users as they often do not openly discuss it with their therapists because of the fear of consequences from youth welfare services. In order to change this, a structured recording of parenthood by the treatment providers is required. This is the prerequisite for being able to offer family-focused treatment to those affected. In Germany, three evidence-based therapy programs are available for this purpose: SHIFT, SHIFT Plus and MAMADAM. Additionally, a number of programs developed in the Anglo-American region can also be used. In contrast, the evidence for web-based programs is much weaker. Discussion: In order to establish family-focused treatment approaches for drug-using parents across the board, long-term, secure funding is required. The necessary framework conditions must be created at a political level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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45. The Politics of Knowledge and Social Cash Transfers: The Constitutive Effects of an Anti-Poverty Regime in Indonesia.
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McCarthy, John, Nooteboom, Gerben, Hadi, Shaummil, Kutanegara, Pande Made, and Muliati, Nulwita
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CONDITIONAL cash transfer programs , *POVERTY reduction , *GLOBALIZATION , *RURAL development , *FOOD security , *PUBLIC welfare , *HEALTH services accessibility - Abstract
Recent decades have witnessed the globalisation of policies promoting social cash transfers as a critical instrument for poverty reduction. Among various approaches, the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) model promoted by the World Bank has gained discursive dominance in countries where this strategy, and its technical model for implementation, appear more attractive than competing alternatives. While research has evaluated CCT programmes and considered the politics of development that they represent in Latin America, researchers are yet to explore the constitutive effects of CCT ways of knowing and measuring poverty in the societies of rural Asia. This paper explores the consequences of CCT knowledge politics in rural Indonesia. It argues that CCT practices of knowing and measuring have paradoxical effects. The programme makes direct payments to millions of impoverished households, producing well-documented patterns of inclusion and advancement. Yet, CCT knowledge practices involve simplifications and generate significant mis-targeting, eliciting a never-ending repair process among state actors, local leaders, and communities. This metricised knowledge system depoliticises political questions of distribution. It conceals alternative ways of knowing and addressing poverty, producing an order of entitlements somewhat at odds with established community logics of inclusion, while provoking a local politics of distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A successful transnational cold war intervention? Revisiting the Heung Yee Kuk's "goodwill" tour of Britain's Chinatowns, 1967–1970.
- Author
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Rawcliffe, Dalton
- Subjects
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CHINESE people , *ALLEGIANCE , *POLITICAL stability , *PUBLIC welfare , *BRITISH people - Abstract
Most ethnic Chinese living and working in Britain in the late 1960s were from Hong Kong's New Territories. Many of these British migrants blamed the Hong Kong government for importing cheap foodstuffs and driving farmers off the land to build new infrastructural projects. In 1967, Hong Kong experienced a wave of social and political unrest commonly referred to as the 1967 Leftist Riots. The unrest spread to parts of Britain's Chinatown, where a leftist movement emerged in sympathy with the anti-colonial rioters. In response, the Heung Yee Kuk, a legal advisory organisation that represented established interests in the New Territories, proposed to send a 'goodwill tour' to Britain's Chinatowns to demonstrate that the Hong Kong government was committed to their welfare. The unlikely alliance proved politically expedient as both had good reason to foster the political loyalty of Britain's migrant Chinese. In particular, both parties understood the economic necessity of quieting the unrest to ensure the continued flow of remittance back to the colony. The detailed report of migrant Chinese grievances with the British and Hong Kong governments produced by the Heung Yee Kuk delegates led to welfare reforms for the Chinese communities of Hong Kong and Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Tensions in digital welfare states: Three perspectives on care and control.
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Zakharova, Irina, Jarke, Juliane, and Kaun, Anne
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DIGITAL transformation , *PUBLIC welfare , *WELFARE state , *DIGITAL technology , *SOCIAL justice - Abstract
Proponents of digital transformation in welfare provision argue that digital technologies can take over tedious tasks and free resources to provide better care for those in need. Digital technologies, however, are often developed in line with a logic of control and dispositions around surveillance and efficiency which challenge careful engagements. In this conceptual article, we explore emerging tensions in digital welfare arrangements and propose an analytical framework to illuminate interrelations between care and control in values, infrastructures, and work related to the provision of welfare services. Illustrating the application of this framework with three empirical vignettes, we discuss how digital welfare technologies shape relations between state care and control. Considering theories of care in relation to the digital welfare state, we give a nuanced perspective on the contingencies of the digital transformation and add to the literature concerned with social justice by attending to everyday lived experiences in-between control and care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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48. Intermediaries as infrastructure: Interrogating the phatic labor of state-building.
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Singh, Ranjit
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DELIVERY of goods , *DIGITAL certificates , *DIGITAL technology , *PUBLIC welfare , *INTERMEDIATION (Finance) - Abstract
Investments in the digital welfare state are often driven by the promise of removing intermediaries between the state and citizens, yet they continue to play a key role in the last mile delivery of state services. By intermediaries, I mean people who interface between bureaucrats and citizens. Their work, often as proxies for citizens, is not only to simplify bureaucratic procedures for them, but also help insulate them from bureaucratic apathy. Based on 18-months of ethnographic fieldwork, I describe the work of intermediaries around government offices, who (in)visibly support citizens in navigating the bureaucratic procedures of enrolling into Aadhaar, India's biometrics-based national identity number. Building on Julia Elyachar's conception of "phatic labor," I position such intermediaries themselves as infrastructure and illustrate how their affective networks can be leveraged to orchestrate a form of distributive justice to ensure that being marginal does not preclude a citizen's access to welfare services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Hidden Populations for Healthcare Financial Protection in the Super-Aging Society: Closing the Gap Between Policy and Practice.
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Sasaki, Noriko, Rosenberg, Megumi, Shin, Jung-ho, Kunisawa, Susumu, and Imanaka, Yuichi
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PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging , *PUBLIC hospitals , *WORK , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL workers , *MENTAL health , *PROFESSIONAL ethics , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *HEALTH insurance , *HEALTH policy , *SOCIAL services , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FINANCIAL stress , *SURVEYS , *ODDS ratio , *UNIVERSAL healthcare , *RURAL population , *PUBLIC welfare , *MEDICAL care for older people , *GUARDIAN & ward , *DEMENTIA , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL classes , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *REGRESSION analysis , *SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
Despite the remarkable health achievements of Japan's universal health coverage since 1961, along with numerous social programs to ensure financial protection, a growing proportion of the older population reportedly experiences financial hardship for essential health care. The socio-behavioral and economic situation of the households in need and the effective policy interventions remain unknown. To identify the reasons behind older persons' financial hardship and the effective policy interventions, we performed a questionnaire survey of social workers in all hospitals, local government offices and social service agencies across six prefectures in Kansai region. Data from 553 respondents revealed that the financial difficulties related to health care are often closely intertwined with social and mental health hardships experienced by older people and their families. Notably, potentially helpful programs including 'free/low-cost medical treatment program' and the adult guardianship system for dementia were infrequently used. Moreover, male, social workers at local offices/agencies, and less than 10 years' professional experience associated with infrequent use of key protective programs. To close the gap between policy and practice, policies should focus on clients' daily living needs, and new frontline social workers should receive lifelong training that incorporates their own backgrounds, experiences, and values, including the use of anti-oppressive gerontological approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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50. The moral, the political and social licence in digitally‐driven family policy and intervention: Parents negotiating experiential knowledge and 'other' families.
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Edwards, Rosalind, Gillies, Val, Vannier‐Ducasse, Hélène, and Gorin, Sarah
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FAMILY policy , *PARENTING , *DIGITAL technology , *EQUALITY , *PUBLIC welfare - Abstract
The article provides a conceptually informed empirical critique of the pursuit of social licence as a warrant for data linkage and predictive analytics in the field of family policy intervention. It draws on research focusing on parental views of digitally‐driven family governance in the United Kingdom. We identify the notion of consensus that undergirds the concept of social licence that acts to obscure inequalities and silence conflict, and to reframe digital surveillance and prediction as a moral rather than political issue. Using focus group and individual interview material, we show how parents assert professional or lay experiential knowledges in making judgements about the legitimacy of and trust in operational data technologies, involving struggles between positionings as parents like 'us' and 'other' parents. We demonstrate how parents have different leverages from these unequal and morally charged social locations. Inevitably, the application of social licence in the domain of digital family policy and intervention is fractured by entrenched social divisions and inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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