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Chapter 17: Postmodernity and Social Europe.

Authors :
Ginsburg, Norman
Source :
Postmodernity & the Fragmentation of Welfare; 1998, p267-277, 11p
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

The article presents a discussion of modern social policy and its postmodernisation and then attempts to apply these ideas to analysing the development of the notion of Social Europe, focusing in particular on the Green and White Papers on social policy published by the European Commission in 1993 and 1994 respectively. Modern social policy is driven by the mission of combining capitalist economic efficiency with social and national cohesion. It recognises the primacy of social class divisions within the social structure and its corporatist political basis is the solidarity between the social partners, the representative organisations of capital and labour. The analysis of the texts of the Green Paper and the White Paper on social policy hopefully demonstrates that postmodernisation processes are seeping through into the thinking of the Commission and that the idea of Social Europe is moving in more realistic directions. With the realisation that a supra-national, federal EU welfare state will never happen, attempts have been made by political scientists to theorise the nature of EU social policy now and in the future. Social policy in Europe is being driven hard by economic policy, notably the Maastricht convergence criteria, which arguably reflect more of a neo-liberal agenda and the narrow economic interests of capital. Great concern is expressed about social cohesion, but it is not sufficient to be translated into effective policies.

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9780415163927
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Postmodernity & the Fragmentation of Welfare
Publication Type :
Book
Accession number :
17016606