Social Security in the Global Village

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A01=Christina Behrendt
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Author_Christina Behrendt
Basic Safety Net
benefits
Bilateral Social Security Agreements
Category=JKSB
Category=JPQB
Category=KCP
comparative social policy
Comparative Welfare State Research
demographic transition impacts
Disposable Income Inequality
Dummy Variables
dumping
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU National
family policy
Family Policy Systems
Federal Reserve
Fuzzy Membership Scores
GDR Economy
globalization
income redistribution
International Tax Competition
labor
labor market insecurity
market
migrant social rights
Minimum Income Protection
Minimum Income Schemes
Modify OECD Scale
national social security schemes
Net Replacement Rates
OECD Country
poverty
protection
rates
Social Assistance Entitlements
Social Assistance Schemes
social cohesion
Social Expenditure Ratios
Social Security Schemes
Social Security Transfers
state
transnational welfare regimes
unemployment insurance
Unemployment Insurance Model
Vice Versa
welfare
welfare state adaptation strategies
West Germany
World Development Reports

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765809308
  • Weight: 554g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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There is growing recognition that globalization places major pressures on the development of social security schemes. Internationalization of the economy has important consequences for labor markets: employment is becoming less secure and inequality and social exclusion more pronounced in many countries. At the same time, there are some fundamental socio-demographic changes: new family structures, an aging population, and migration. Increased uncertainty and exclusion intensify the need for social security. Both the public and private sectors are redefining their roles, reshuffling responsibilities between states, markets, families, and individuals. Social Security in the Global Village investigates the new challenges for social security in an increasingly globalized world and analyzes strategies of adjustment. A group of internationally renowned experts in this field assess the variety of effects that globalization has had on national social security schemes. A common theme of a first set of chapters is the relationship between common pressures of globalization and the role of national institutional frameworks in shaping the impact of these pressures on social security. Countries are dealing in different ways with these challenges and follow diverse pathways of adjustment that quite often contradict widespread assumptions about the effects of globalization. A second set of chapters is devoted to challenges in selected policy areas: migration, labor markets, and social cohesion issues. Among the topical issues discussed are the social rights of migrants, the changing rights and obligations in unemployment insurance, lessons to be drawn for the promotion of employment, the relationship between family policy and employment policy for mothers, the management of social risks, and the protection of an adequate income in an active welfare state. Research can help to enlighten and inform the policy debate about the legitimacy of social security in the new, globalized world. This book aims to help those involved-researchers and policy makers alike-advance toward that goal.

Roland Sigg is head of research at the International Social Security Association in Geneva, Switzerland, and lecturer at the University of Geneva. He currently coordinates comparative research projects in the field of the development of the Welfare State, pension, work incapacity and reintegration, and the administration of social security. He has edited several books on various social security issues and published numerous articles in national and international periodicals. Christina Behrendt is a freelance researcher and consultant for the International Social Security Association in Geneva. Her publications include a forthcoming monograph on the effectiveness of minimum income schemes in alleviating poverty, and articles in the Journal of European Social Policy and the International Social Security Review.

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