Rethinking universalism and social rights
Blog: Social Europe
Social rights in Europe today require marrying 20th-century universalism with the meeting of diverse, complex needs.
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Blog: Social Europe
Social rights in Europe today require marrying 20th-century universalism with the meeting of diverse, complex needs.
This contribution argues for strengthening EU citizenship in order to make it not only attractive for mobile Europeans but also for 'stayers' who feel left behind in processes of globalisation and European integration. EU citizenship is primarily 'isopolitical' and regulatory; it confers horizontal rights to people to enter the citizenship spaces of other member states and it imposes duties of non-discrimination on these states without providing for redistribution in response to perceived or real burdens resulting from free movement. I suggest several reforms that aim broadly at empowering the stayers. Among my proposals are an 'EU social card', universal transferrable vouchers for accessing social rights in other member states that stayers can pass on to their children who want to move, and a European wide social insurance scheme that would supplement those of the member states. I also suggest to strengthen EU citizenship with some soft duties, such as earmarking a small percentage of personal income tax for EU social policies or raising funds for such policies through fees on an EU social card or EU passports.
BASE
This Forum debate has gone way beyond my expectations and hopes. I thought that commentators would mainly address my proposals on enhancing rights and introducing duties. The conversation has instead extended to my diagnosis as well, to the rationale which lies at the basis of my prescriptive ideas. By focusing on starting points, the forum has thus brought into light different perspectives and styles of reasoning around citizenship and even broader political questions. With hindsight, I should have spelled out more carefully my basic assumptions. But there is time to remedy this now – and not just for the sake of this particular discussion. I am in fact convinced that a closer and more systematic dialogue between empirical, normative, legal and social theorists would be a welcome and beneficial innovation, a way to contrast excessive disciplinary perspectivism and the related risks of analytical lock-ins.
BASE
In: Collana storica della Banca d'Italia
In: Serie saggi e ricerche 7
World Affairs Online
In: Routledge 6
In: Routledge Studies in the Political Economy of the Welfare State Ser.
In: Routledge/EUI studies in the political economy of welfare, 6
In: Routledge/EUI studies in the political economy of welfare, 6
This new study delivers a detailed analysis of the efforts being made to reduce poverty and social exclusion in Portugal, Spain, Italy and Greece. After an initial discussion of the 'southern model' of the welfare state, the situation of each country is clearly illustrated. This book also discusses how the experience of southern Europe might bear upon the situation of the East European accession countries. This is excellent reading for those interested in social change across Europe and beyond.
In: West European politics 23,2
In: Special issue
In: EUI working paper
In: European Forum 99,13
World Affairs Online