Suchergebnisse
Filter
30 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Activation Policies in the Nordic Countries: Social Democratic Universalism under Pressure
In: Journal of European Area Studies, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 63-77
Activation Policies in the Nordic Countries: Social Democratic Universalism under Pressure
In: Journal of European area studies, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 63-78
ISSN: 1460-8464
Civil Society Elites: A Research Agenda
In: Politics and governance, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 82-85
ISSN: 2183-2463
This editorial introduces the thematic issue on 'civil society elites,' a topic that has been neglected in elite research as well as civil society studies. It elaborates on the concept of 'civil society elites' and explains why this is an important emerging research field. By highlighting different methodological approaches and key findings in the contributions to the thematic issue, this article aims at formulating an agenda for future research in this field.
Civil Society Elites: Exploring the Composition, Reproduction, Integration, and Contestation of Civil Society Actors at the Top
In: Palgrave Studies in Third Sector Research
Chapter 1: Civil society elites -- Chapter 2: The Danish civil society elite 1910–2020 -- Chapter 3: Mirroring the masses? A cross-national comparison of civil society elite composition -- Chapter 4: Organisational, reputational, and visible leaders -- Chapter 5: Consecrating civil society elites in Europe -- Chapter 6: Elite integration through volunteerism -- Chapter 7: Reproduction of elites in Hong Kong through the Hong Kong Jockey Club -- Chapter 8: Civil society boundary crossing and elite integration -- Chapter 9: The interstitial elites of the Italian foundations of banking origin -- Chapter 10: Networks of interlocking leaders among civil society organisations in four European countries -- Chapter 11: Contestation of civil society elites -- Chapter 12: The state as a challenger to civil society elite: the case of Poland -- Chapter 13: Who gets a seat at the table? Identifying incumbents and challengers in the European Parliament's civil society consultations on animal welfare -- Chapter 14: Michels, Mills, and civil society elites.
Civil Society Elites: Exploring the Composition, Reproduction, Integration, and Contestation of Civil Society Actors at the Top
In: Palgrave Studies in Third Sector Research
This open access book introduces a groundbreaking concept - civil society elites - and serves as an essential resource for scholars, researchers and students interested in the complexities of power and influence within contemporary civil societies. Through a series of unique empirical studies, the authors offer a comprehensive examination of the individuals occupying the upper echelons of influential civil society organisations and movements. By delving into the factors that propel individuals into key positions and examining the connections between civil society leaders within and across sectors, the book offers insight into the mechanisms that shape access to powerful positions in civil societies. As a reflection of current debates on elites and populism, the book furthermore explores the expression and conceptualisation of counter-elite positions and criticism of civil society elites. With its original approach, the book serves as a catalyst for further research into inequalities, power structures and elites within civil societies.
Combating poverty in local welfare systems
In: Work and welfare in Europe
This book analyzes national anti-poverty measures at a local level via a set of unique and up-to-date empirical studies of minimum income support schemes and activation measures in five European cities. In examining this 'local welfare system' approach, it investigates the role that civil society organizations play, and the governance arrangements that prevail in contacts between public and civil society actors in local anti-poverty strategies. The current financial and economic crisis has caused increasing levels of poverty and unemployment, and put national minimum income protection schemes under severe strain. Combating Poverty in Local Welfare Systems therefore represents a timely and important intervention in the political and scientific debates as to whether more 'local welfare' is the solution to the challenges facing European welfare states.
EU civil society: patterns of cooperation, competition and conflict
In: Palgrave studies in European political sociology
"This volume provides a novel and relational sociological approach to the study of EU civil society. It focuses on the interactions and interrelations between civil society actors and the forms of capital that structure the fields and sub-fields of EU civil society, through new and important empirical studies on organized EU civil society"--Provided by publisher.
EU civil society: patterns of cooperation, competition and conflict
In: Palgrave studies in European political sociology
World Affairs Online
Citizenship in Nordic welfare states: dynamics of choice, duties and participation in a changing Europe
In: Routledge advances in European politics 46
Citizenship in Nordic welfare states: dynamics of choice, duties and participation in a changing Europe
In: Routledge advances in European politics, 46
This book offers an innovative analysis of the ways in which the relationship between citizens and welfare states - social citizenship - becomes more dynamic and multifaceted as a result of Europeanization and individualization.
Practising empty talk: Compliance and resistance to normative control among caseworkers in the Swedish Public Employment Service
In: Sociologisk forskning: sociological research : journal of the Swedish Sociological Association, Band 59, Heft 3
ISSN: 2002-066X
This article draws on theories of normative control and critical management studies to investigate caseworkers' strategies in correspondence to a new leadership philosophy in the Swedish Public Employment Service called self-leadership. Based on 43 interviews and observations at two local offices, we find that managerial models are arbitrary and cause uncertainty at the local level as caseworkers both comply and resist managerial talk of self-leadership. Based on a distinction between types of and grounds for strategic responses, we identify four subject positions defined as "personal embracement", "personal detachment", "professional recognition" and "professional dismissal". The study shows that newly employed comply through practices of personal embracement, while senior employees resist based on professional dismissal. The article concludes that caseworkers are not docile bodies, who adjust to managerial talk, but derive their identity, engagement and esteem linked to a shared-work identity as organisational professionals. This demonstrates the relevance of closing the gap between street-level bureaucracy and critical management studies to further explore the tension between governing "employees" or "professionals" in contemporary public welfare governance.
The Phoenix syndrome: Netroots organizations strategies to gain and maintain digital resource abundance
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 24, Heft 12, S. 2581-2597
ISSN: 1461-7315
The development of social media challenges the established conceptualizations of resources in social movements. While previous theories largely illustrated social movements as constantly searching for new and more resources, the development of social media has allowed some actors to gather and mobilize extensive resources rapidly, calling for an analysis of resource abundance. The aim of this article is to analyse how netroots organizations strategically act upon digital resource abundance and particularly focuses on how resources are mobilized and managed and how netroots organizations create organizational structures on social media. Three Swedish netroots organizations are used as empirical cases. This article shows that digital resource abundance is rewarding but also resource demanding as netroots organizations has to act like a Phoenix, the Greek mythological bird, as they constantly need to 'reinvent' themselves by being present and active on social media in order to maintain their digital resource abundance.
The importance of discretion for welfare services to minorities: Examining workload and anti‐immigration attitudes
In: Australian journal of public administration, Band 79, Heft 4, S. 426-443
ISSN: 1467-8500
AbstractMigration influx in Western countries resulting in increasingly diverse societies results in more complex situations for bureaucrats in their client interactions in welfare organizations. The role of discretion for services to clients has received much attention in the public administration research and therefore this study explores the relation among perceived workload, anti‐immigration attitudes, perceived discretion, and perceived difficulty in working with migrants. The paper examines the function of perceived discretion as moderator or mediator variable in this constellation. The relations are examined by using structural equation modelling based on a survey among Swedish welfare bureaucrats (N = 1,319). The results show that heavier perceived workload increased the likelihood of experiencing work with migrants as difficult and that greater perceived discretion decreased the likelihood of experiencing work with migrants as difficult. The results suggest that perceived discretion functions as a mediator for the relation between perceived workload and difficulty in work with migrants: potentially functioning as a 'buffer' for organizational pressure. We also found that bureaucrats who hold negative attitudes towards migrants were more likely to express their work with migrants as more difficult. This paper contributes to the public administration literature by increasing our knowledge on how discretion has significance in relation to when bureaucrat's behaviour is determined by specific organizational and personal factors.
The logics of digital advocacy: Between acts of political influence and presence
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 21, Heft 7, S. 1528-1545
ISSN: 1461-7315
A growing body of research highlights how the Internet and social media offer new platforms for advocacy. This article contributes to the debates on digital advocacy by combining interest group and social media studies and present the notions of digital access politics, digital information politics, and digital protest politics for a comprehensive analysis of digital advocacy. Based on a netnographic study of two highly different advocacy groups working with workers' rights in a Swedish context, we find that online and offline activities are highly interconnected. While previous studies have largely focused on how groups gain political influence, present digital advocacy is much more oriented towards gaining political presence through social media. The article proposes that future studies into advocacy in the digital era needs to study acts for political influence and acts for political presence as intertwined or even as two sides of the same coin.