This book analyses the changes of welfare states, examining their sustainability enabled by innovative adaptations. On the basis of evolutionary social sciences, the authors understand the welfare states as complex adaptive systems, in which the actors’ perceptions, strategies and behaviours change in adaptive manners, which results in institutional changes. From this perspective, the dynamics of Nordic welfare states, mainly Finland as the Nordic welfare state under the greatest pressure to adapt, is analysed from the multiple perspectives of history, politics, economics and social policy. Through these analyses, the authors show that the long-term changes in welfare states can be creative evolutionary processes in which the experiences, cognitive frameworks, resources and capacities of different actors allow for diverse responses and, as a result of interaction, diverse outcomes. The book also illustrates the historical processes of welfare states’ formation that have created the human and social resources and capabilities that enable innovative responses today.
قائمة المحتويات
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. The Making of the Welfare State in Finland.- Chapter 3. Agrarian Party and Kela: Evolutionary Development of Finnish Social Policy.- Chapter 4. Family and the Evolutionary Development of the Welfare States: A Comparison of the Discourse on Child and Family Policy in Finland and Japan.- Chapter 5. Industrial Transformation, Innovation, and the Enabling Roles of the Nordic Welfare State.- Chapter 6. The Potential of the Co-creation Approach to Create Innovation to Better Meet the Needs of Communities.- Chapter 7. Understanding the Change of the Finnish Digital Health and Welfare Ecosystems.- Chapter 8. Innovation and Social Capital in Nordic Welfare States: The Advantages of Nordic Societies in a Modern Economy.- Chapter 9. Creative Evolution of Finnish Regional Governance.- Chapter 10. The Evolution of Finnish Welfare State and its Structural Reforms of Welfare Provision.- Chapter 11. Adaptation of Finnish Welfare State to a Post-industrial Society: Practicing “The Consensus Model of Democracy” through Formation of Diverse Coalition Governments.- Chapter 12. The Future(s) of the Welfare State.- Chapter 13. Glossary.
عن المؤلف
Norio Tokumaru obtained his Ph.D. in economics from Kyoto University. He is a Professor of Economics at Faculty of Policy Studies, Kansai University, Osaka, Japan. His main research interests include the comparative political economy of innovation systems and the institutional foundations of emerging, novel approaches to industrial and innovation policies. He is the co-editor of the books including Servitization, IT-ization, and Innovation Models: Two-stage industrial cluster theory (Routledge, 2013), and Innovative ICT Industrial Architecture in East Asia (Springer, 2017). He serves as an Associate Editor of Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review.
Chino Yabunaga is a Professor of Social Policy of the Faculty of Global and Regional Studies of Toyo University. Her main research theme is the comparative study of welfare states and societies. She published several books in Japanese including Child Care Policies in the World (Horitsu Bunka Sha Publising, 2012), Welfare State and Tourism: A New Industrial Strategy in Nordic Countries and Japan (Sairyusha Publishing, 2018). Also, one of her works in English is ‘The Welfare State and COVID-19 Countermeasures: The Relationship of Trust and Cooperation between Citizens and Their Governments in Sweden and Finland’ in Suzuki, N. et al (eds.) Public Behavioural Responses to Policy Making during the Pandemic, (Routledge, forthcoming). She was the chair of the Japan Association for Northern European Studies, and a former board member of the Japan Association of Political Sciences.
Yuriko Shibayama is an Associate Professor of Department of Nordic Studies, School of Cultural and Social Studies, Tokai University in Kanagawa, Japan. She earned her Master’s degree in Social Sciences from Graduate School of Social Sciences, Waseda University in 2008. She specializes in comparative politics, with a focus on studies on Nordic politics and welfare states, especially Finnish party politics and history of social policy. Her recent research interests include the political process of pensions and health insurance in Finland and creative society policy in the post-industrial era.