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Demographic changes transform societies and challenge existing
institutional solutions and policies. The need for policies
addressing these challenges has increasingly been put on the
agenda. The Making of Ageing Policy analyzes these innovative
policy ideas and practices at both the international and the
national level. The book provides insights into the value basis and
justifications of ageing policies, the potential for conflict and
how policy ideas are embedded in institutional defense and advocacy
for institutional change and reform. In terms of policy ideas the
economically focused 'productive ageing' dominates, but the book
finds instances where the broader 'active ageing' approach has
gained a hold in policymaking. Ageing policy reforms within
pensions and labour market policy include measures to make people
extend their working life. In long-term care reforms abound, and
implies changes in the responsibility of financing and provision
but the patterns across countries differ substantially. The authors
provide normative analysis of ageing policy ideas, divulge
political conflicts and consensus on ageing policy, and contribute
by describing and analyzing the changing institutional landscape of
ageing politics and policies throughout Europe. It will prove
insightful for academics and researchers in the field, but it will
also appeal to practitioners who are increasingly dealing with
demographic challenges across a wide number of policy sectors in
their daily affairs. Contributors include: M. Doyle, Z. Drozdzak,
R. Ervik, L. Foster, I. Helgoy, N. Kildal, G. Lamura, T.S. Linden,
M.G. Melchiorre, E. Nilssen, J. Perek-Bialas, A. Principi, A.
Ruzik-Sierdzinska, C. Schiller, V. Timonen, K. Turek, A. Walker
The 'Golden Age' of the welfare state in Europe was characterised
by a strengthening of social rights as citizens became increasingly
protected through the collective provision of income security and
social services. The oil crisis, inflation and high unemployment of
the 1970s largely saw the end of welfare expansion with critical
voices claiming the welfare state had created an unbalanced focus
on the social rights of individuals, above their responsibilities
as citizens. During the 1980s many western countries developed
contractual modes of thinking and regulation within welfare policy.
Contractualism has proved a significant organising principle for
public reforms in general, and for social policy reforms in
particular as it embraces both a way of justifying certain welfare
policies and of constructing specific socio-legal policy
instruments. Engaging with both the critique of the welfare state
and the subsequent policy responses, expert contributors in this
book examine contractualism as a discourse, comprising principles
and justifying ideas, and as a legal and social practice. Covering
the international debate on conditionality they discuss European
experiences with active social citizenship ideas and contractualism
providing individual case studies and comparisons from a wide range
of European countries.
This book considers the role of international organizations and
their promotion of ideas and recommendations in social and health
policy. It explores a wide range of organizations, scrutinizing
their ideas-based content, their role as policy actors and their
impact on national policy. What is the role of international
organizations in the making of national social policy ideas and
practices? What is the content of ideas advocated by international
organizations? In examining these and other questions this book
presents a range of international organizations dealing with social
and health policies. The authors illustrate how welfare policy is
shaped by the interplay between national and international
policy-makers, focusing on the role of ideas rather than revisiting
the more commonly discussed economic and technological issues
associated with internationalization of welfare policy. They
explore the content of ideas that international actors such as the
EU and the OECD are promoting through recommendations and decrees
concerning various systems of social policy. The possible effects
of national and supranational welfare discourses on national
welfare systems are also discussed. Dealing with both with the
normative and cognitive dimensions of social and health policy
discourses, this comprehensive book will prove invaluable to
policy-makers as well practitioners within international
organizations. It will also strongly appeal to scholars of
international studies, public policy and social policy.
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