Abstract

Abstract Recent reforms in welfare states generate new challenges to social citizenship. Social citizenship depends on the readiness of voters to support reciprocity and social inclusion and their trust in welfare state institutions as services that will meet their needs. Reform programmes in most western countries combine New Public Management, linking market competition and regulation by targets to achieve greater efficiency and responsiveness to service-users, and welfare-to-work and make-work-pay activation policies to manage labour market change. Both developments rest on a rational actor approach to human motivation. The UK has pursued the reform programme with more vigour than any other major European country and provides a useful object less of its strengths and limitations. The book provides a detailed analytic account of social science approaches to agency. It shows that the rational actor approach has difficulties in explaining how social inclusion and social trust arise. Policies based on it provide weak support for these aspects of citizenship. It is attractive to policy-makers seeking solutions to the problem of improving the efficiency and responsiveness of welfare systems in a more globalised world, in which citizens are more critical and the authority of national governments is in decline. Recent reform programmes were undertaken to meet real pressures on existing patterns of provision. They have been largely successful in maintaining mass services but risk undermining social inclusion and eroding trust in public welfare institutions. In the longer term, they may destroy the social citizenship essential to sustain welfare states.

Keywords:
Social citizenship Citizenship Agency (philosophy) Social policy Social Welfare Welfare state Political science Reciprocity (cultural anthropology) Inclusion (mineral) Public relations Public economics Business Public administration Economics Sociology Politics Social science

Metrics

105
Cited By
9.81
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
237
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Social Policy and Reform Studies
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Political Science and International Relations
Housing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
Social Sciences →  Economics, Econometrics and Finance →  Finance
Political and Economic history of UK and US
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Political Science and International Relations

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