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Children and parents have become a focus of debates on 'new social
risks' in European welfare states. Policymaking elites have
converged in defining such risks, and they have outlined new forms
of parenting support to better safeguard children and activate
their potential. Increasingly, parents are suspected of falling
short of public expectations. Contributors to this special issue
scrutinize this shift towards parenting as performance and analyse
recent forms of parenting support.
This special issue of the Zeitschrift fur Familienforschung is
based on policy reports for a comparative project that investigated
the interaction between changing family forms, changing employment
patterns, and family policies in the Nordic Countries (Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Sweden, and Norway), The Netherlands, the United
Kingdom and G- many. The project was financed by the Nordic Council
of Ministers' Welfare Research Programme (2002-2005). Jonathan
Bradshaw, Professor of Social Policy, University of York, UK, and
Aksel Hatland, Research Director, NOVA, Oslo, Norway, chaired the
p- ject. The project team included senior national experts and
younger researchers from each country in the study. These were:
National experts Peter Abrahamson: Associate Professor of
Sociology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Ulla Bjornberg:
Professor of Sociology, Goteborg University, Sweden Dr. Gudny Bjork
Eydal: Lecturer in Social Work and Sociology, University of
Reykjavik, Iceland Katja Forssen: Professor of Social Work,
University of Turku, Finland Trudie Knijn: Professor of Social
Science, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Stefan Olafsson:
Professor of Sociology, University of Reykjavik, Iceland Ilona
Ostner: Professor of Social Policy, University of Gottingen,
Germany Dr. Anne Skevik: Senior Researcher, NOVA, Oslo, Norway
Veli-Matti Ritakallio: Professor of Social Policy, University of
Turku, Finland Young researchers Lillemor Dahlgren: Research
Assistant, Dept. of Sociology, Goteborg University, Sweden Dr.
Naomi Finch: Research Fellow, Social Policy Research Unit,
University of York, UK Anne-Mari Jaakola: Doctoral Student, Dept.
Dieser Band enthalt Analysen des sozialstrukturellen Wandels fur
die Bundesrepublik Deutschland in der Nachkriegszeit, insbesondere
nach der deutschen Vereinigung mit Blick auf zukunftige,
beispielsweise europaische und globale Herausforderungen."
Das Buch thematisiert den Wandel vom Ernahrermodell zum "Adult
Worker Model." Wie reagiert die Sozialpolitik auf Veranderungen im
Geschlechterverhaltnis? Dieser Frage wird in konzeptionellen und
empirisch vergleichenden Beitragen nachgegangen."
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