Tendencias y nuevos disenos de las politicas sociales a comienzos del Tercer Milenio
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 199, S. 25-38
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 199, S. 25-38
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 225-226, S. 91-122
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Historia contemporánea: HC : revista del Departamento de Historia Contemporánea, Heft 1, S. 67-93
ISSN: 1130-2402
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 227, S. 3-22
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Nueva Sociedad, Heft 164, S. 146-158
ISSN: 0251-3552
World Affairs Online
In: Política y sociedad: revista de la Universidad Complutense, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 185-208
ISSN: 1130-8001
In: Economia, Sociedad y Territorio, Band 2, Heft 5, S. 117-147
In: Cuadernos de Relaciones Laborales, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 101-121
In: Política y sociedad: revista de la Universidad Complutense, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología, Heft 18, S. 185-194
ISSN: 1130-8001
In: Política y sociedad: revista de la Universidad Complutense, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología, Heft 29, S. 107-117
ISSN: 1130-8001
In: Cuadernos del CENDES, Band 52, S. 7-38
ISSN: 1012-2508
In: Revista de relaciones internacionales, Heft 73, S. 77-89
ISSN: 0185-0814
The impact of globalization & regionalization on the European Union's (EU) welfare culture is examined in terms of the effects produced by both open international & internal competition among European nations. Welfare state growth in post-WWII Europe accompanied a focus on internal rather than external markets. Various economic conditions, eg, growing unemployment in the 1970s & 1980s, changed this, forcing nations to practice a mixture of openness & neoprotectionism that decreased external competition but increased competition among EU nations. Membership requirements such as a 3% public deficit & structural changes, eg, demographic growth, have caused nations to reduce their welfare spending & encouraged a standardization of welfare benefits among divergent liberal, corporatist, universalist, & late models that are characterized by differences in implementation, quantity, & quality; eg, GB (liberal) has reduced unemployment benefits, while Spain (late) has raised the retirement age. New economic conditions have changed the welfare state, yet each nation retains distinctive features. 4 Tables. Adapted from the source document.
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 177, S. 3-37
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Sistema: revista de ciencias sociales, Heft 182, S. 47-74
ISSN: 0210-0223
In: Revista española de ciencia política, Heft 27, S. 93-106
ISSN: 1575-6548
Within the last eleven years, Syria has gone into very important -- economical and social -- changes that have modified the very nature of the regime. This investigation seeks to explore the Syrian charities in order to seize, through them, the transformations of authoritarianism in Syria under the presidency of Bashar al-Asad. The main hypothesis here is that shrinking state resources together with the regional and international political conjuncture have led the baathist regime to promote certain segments of the Syrian civil society among which charitable projects are the most important. These new politics regarding the associative sector have taken place in the context of a readjusting state where the redefinition of public policy is both based in the partial privatization of social welfare and in the so-called logic of partial "off-loading" by the State. Both factors reflect a clear rethinking of the previous social pact. Adapted from the source document.