Welfare is an important concept in the social sciences. It is also challenged and contested not only by alternative concepts but also as a political goal in itself. Using a multi-disciplinary approach, this book takes a fresh look at the continuing relevance of welfare in the context of public policy, recent scholarly developments and changes in popular attitudes and behaviour.
The book connects theory and practice. Tracing the concept’s background in economics, political science and social policy, the book juxtaposes welfare with newer approaches, such as subjective well-being, capabilities, care, social exclusion and social capital. The links between welfare and political ideas are also elaborated. The welfare state, as it developed historically in Europe and as it is changing in different countries, is given an important place in the analysis. Drawing on a range of empirical work, the book in its final part considers how individuals and groups attain welfare and how this shapes people’s decisions and actions in their everyday lives.
Written in a lively style, the book provides students of sociology, social policy and political science with a valuable point of access to a range of debates and thinking in the field of welfare and related concepts.
Spis treści
Acknowledgements vi
Lists of Tables, Figures and Boxes vii
Introduction 1
1 Founding Ideas and Approaches 12
2 Well-being and Other Challenges to Conventional Understandings of Welfare 36
Intermezzo 59
3 Classic Political Philosophies of Welfare 61
4 The State and Public Welfare 84
Intermezzo 109
5 Securing Material Welfare through the Market and the State 111
6 The Personal and Social Relations of Welfare 134
7 Conclusion 154
Notes 161
References 169
Index 189
O autorze
Mary Daly is Professor of Sociology at Queen’s University, Belfast.