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Children, Gender and Families in Mediterranean Welfare States [electronic resource] / edited by Mimi Ajzenstadt, John Gal.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Childrens Well-Being: Indicators and Research ; 2 | Childrens Well-Being: Indicators and Research ; 2Editor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2010Descripción: XIV, 226 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789048188420
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 306 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • HN25
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: Recent decades have seen a growing sophistication in the study of welfare states and social policy in general. This greater depth has come about as a result of more complex theorization; richer case study analysis; and the inclusion of additional sources of provision such as not-for-profit, market-based, informal and family welfare. The fields of study open to social scientists in this arena have also expanded to include issues such as globalization, gender, immigration and children, while benchmarking and performance monitoring within countries have afforded huge quantities of new data that allow for much more detailed cross-national comparative analysis. There is intense interest in the social well-being and the legal and economic status of families, women and children in the welfare state, and this volume deals with the issues from a unique welfare regime perspective. Casting aside the generally held assumption that national welfare regimes have common characteristics, this book makes the case that the Mediterranean states share a unique set of commonalities. In doing so, it offers a close comparative analysis of policies towards children, families and gender in these nationsItaly, Spain, Greece, Turkey and Israel. Beginning with an overview of these countries welfare states and a discussion of the issues of children, families and gender in general terms, the volume then provides readers at both undergraduate and graduate level with detailed country-by-country comparative studies of these issues, authored by leading experts from the nations themselves.
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Key Concepts -- Investing in Children? Changes in Policies Concerning Children and Families in European Countries -- Understanding Gender Economic Inequality Across Welfare Regimes -- Neighborhoods and Families -- Setting the Scene -- Exploring the Extended Family of Mediterranean Welfare States, or: Did Beveridge and Bismarck Take a Mediterranean Cruise Together? -- Country Studies -- Children, Gender and Families in the Italian Welfare State -- The Erosion of ǣFamilismǥ in the Spanish Welfare State: Childcare Policy Since 1975 -- Children, Families and Women in the Israeli State: 1880s2008 -- Gender, Family and Children at the Crossroads of Social Policy Reform in Turkey: Alternating Between Familialism and Individualism -- Gender, Children and Families in the Greek Welfare State -- A Cross-National Comparison -- Is There a ǣMediterranean Welfare Stateǥ? A Country-Level Analysis.

Recent decades have seen a growing sophistication in the study of welfare states and social policy in general. This greater depth has come about as a result of more complex theorization; richer case study analysis; and the inclusion of additional sources of provision such as not-for-profit, market-based, informal and family welfare. The fields of study open to social scientists in this arena have also expanded to include issues such as globalization, gender, immigration and children, while benchmarking and performance monitoring within countries have afforded huge quantities of new data that allow for much more detailed cross-national comparative analysis. There is intense interest in the social well-being and the legal and economic status of families, women and children in the welfare state, and this volume deals with the issues from a unique welfare regime perspective. Casting aside the generally held assumption that national welfare regimes have common characteristics, this book makes the case that the Mediterranean states share a unique set of commonalities. In doing so, it offers a close comparative analysis of policies towards children, families and gender in these nationsItaly, Spain, Greece, Turkey and Israel. Beginning with an overview of these countries welfare states and a discussion of the issues of children, families and gender in general terms, the volume then provides readers at both undergraduate and graduate level with detailed country-by-country comparative studies of these issues, authored by leading experts from the nations themselves.

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