New Life Courses, Social Risks and Social Policy in East Asia

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Achieving Work Family Balance
Active Labour Market Policy
ageing population challenges
care
Category=JBF
Contemporary Society
Diversion Group
Double Responsibilities
East Asian Welfare Model
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eq_non-fiction
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Family Care Leave
family policy East Asia
Female Individualization
gendered care responsibilities
insurance
Japanese Welfare State
Korean Longitudinal Study
Korean Seniors
labour market precarity
lial
life course risk management strategies
lone
Lone Mothers
long
Long Term Care Service
LTCI
migrant
Migrant Care Workers
mothers
Non-standard Employment
Non-standard Jobs
piety
Post-secondary Education
Post-secondary Graduates
Productivist Welfare Capitalism
Social Security Schemes
term
welfare state adaptation
Women's Work Participation Rate
Work Family Balance
Work Participation Rate
workers
Young Men
youth transitions research

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138476745
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Social policy in modern industrialised societies is increasingly challenged by new social risks. These include insecure employment resulting from ever more volatile labour markets, new family and gender relationships resulting from the growing participation of women in the labour market, and the many problems resulting from very much longer human life expectancy. Whereas once social policy had to be in step with a standardised, relatively stable and predictable life course, it now has to cope with non-standardised individual preferences, life courses and families, and the consequent increased risks and uncertainties. This book examines these new life courses and their impact on social policy across a range of East Asian societies. It shows how governments and social welfare institutions have been slow to respond to the new challenges. In response, we propose a life-course sensitised policy as an approach to manage these risks. Overall, the book provides many new insights which will assist advance social policy in East Asia.

Raymond K H Chan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Applied Social Studies at the City University of Hong Kong, China

Jens O Zinn is a Professor in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne, Australia.

Lih-rong Wang is Professor of Social Work in the College of Social Science at National Taiwan University, Taiwan.