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Journal ArticleDOI

Between workfare and enablement – The different paths to transformation of the welfare state: A comparative analysis of activating labour market policies

Irene Dingeldey
- 01 Oct 2007 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 6, pp 823-851
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TLDR
In this article, different perceptions of the workfare and the enabling state perspectives on the positive and negative aspects of activating policies are reconstructed as "pure forms" in order to obtain theoretical standards against which the empirical cases of activating labour market policies in Denmark, the United Kingdom and Germany are characterised and compared.
Abstract
. The concepts that address different paths to transformation of the welfare state as a ‘workfare’, an ‘enabling’ or an ‘activating’ state share the idea that traditional welfare policies, mostly aiming at decommodification, are more and more replaced by social policies emphasising (re-)commodification. Activating labour market policy therefore is supposed to play a central role within the paradigm shift of welfare state policies. It is understood to involve a mix of the enforcement of labour market participation, the conditioning of rights and growing obligations of the individual at one side, and an increase of services in order to promote employability and restore social equity at the other. In this article, the different perceptions of the workfare and the enabling state perspectives on the positive and negative aspects of activating policies are reconstructed as ‘pure forms’ in order to obtain theoretical standards against which the empirical cases of activating labour market policies in Denmark, the United Kingdom and Germany are characterised and compared. The actual reform path is described by a combination of two indicators: the strength of the workfare and the strength of the enabling elements of the activating labour market policies. The evidence on activating labour market reforms confirms that in both dimensions a move in the same direction is taking place, but without producing growing convergence. Different welfare state types keep on producing different mixes of workfare and enabling policies, leading to very different levels of decommodification and (re-)commodification. Thus, an ongoing divergence of policies also exists within the new paradigm of an activating labour market policy, although single countries seem to change their alignment to a particular welfare state type.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Provision of Income Protection and Activation Services for the Unemployed in ‘Active’ Welfare States. An International Comparison

TL;DR: The authors discusses reforms of the design of the organisational arena for policy implementation and service provision in European welfare states, focusing on the policy areas of income protection and activation, and argues that these reforms are not merely reflecting new ways of thinking about organizing the public sector and providing public services, but should also be interpreted as responses to policy administration and implementation problems arising in the process of making welfare states more activating.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life satisfaction effects of unemployment in Europe: The moderating influence of labour market policy

TL;DR: This article applied multilevel and panel estimation techniques to identify the moderating effect of unemployment benefit generosity and active labour market policy on life satisfaction of the unemployed in 21 European countries under study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demography as a Push toward Gender Equality?: Current Reforms of German Family Policy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the policy objectives and potential outcomes of one of the recent reforms in German family policy, the new par- enting benefit, which introduces not only a new policy instru- ment that puts a stronger focus on the labor-market activation of mothers but also an attempt to raise the birth rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Working time reduction policy in a sustainable economy: criteria and options for its design.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new "green life course approach" for working time policy design and argue that, as a complement to more conventional working time policies, this could be a valuable tool to combine environmental and wellbeing goals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neoliberalism, economic restructuring and policy change: Precarious housing and precarious employment in Australia

TL;DR: This article explored the ways in which changing housing markets, economic conditions and government policies have affected vulnerable individuals and households, using Australia as a case study, finding that a substantial number and proportion of low income Australians have been affected by housing and employment that is insecure with profound implications for vulnerability.
References
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Book

Transformation of the welfare state : the silent surrender of public responsibility

Neil Gilbert
TL;DR: Gilbert as discussed by the authors assesses what welfare looks like in a free market world and finds a fundamental transformation in the welfare state-a turn away from broad-based entitlements and automatic benefits to a new, "enabling" approach defined by policies designed to promote privatization and labor force participation.
Book

'An offer you can't refuse': Workfare in international perspective

TL;DR: Workfare in the welfare state as mentioned in this paper discusses the French republican route to activation uneven development, local authorities and workfare in Germany, young unemployed people and the Jobseekers' Employment Act national objectives and local implementation of workfare.
Journal ArticleDOI

Workfare With Welfare: Recent Reforms of the Danish Welfare State

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that Denmark has recently seen a significant drop in unemployment that has not been matched by any corresponding increase in inflation, and assume that this remarkable achievement is rooted in the ongoing transition from the Keynesian welfare state (KWS) to a Schumpeterian workfare regime (SWR).
BookDOI

The Dynamics of Full Employment

TL;DR: The Dynamics of Full Employment as discussed by the authors provides an internationally comparative, interdisciplinary approach to the dynamics of full employment and views the labour market not only as an economic institution, but also as a social one.
Journal ArticleDOI

European Tax Systems and their Impact on Family Employment Patterns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the structure of rewards or concessions contained in the various tax systems for particular family employment patterns with the frequency distributions of the various family patterns of labour force participation that can be observed in ten different European countries, however, a clear shaping effect of tax systems can not be found.