Author:
CANTILLON BEA,VAN LANCKER WIM
Abstract
AbstractIn this article, we discuss some of the new tensions that are emerging between the different foundations of the welfare state. Several developments have led to the advent of the social investment state, in which people are being activated and empowered instead of passively protected. We argue that this social policy shift has been accompanied by a normative shift towards a more stringent interpretation of social protection in which individual responsibility andquid pro quohave become the primordial focus. Using the Belgian (Flemish) disciplinary policy on truancy and school allowances as a case in point, we demonstrate that this social policy paradigm may have detrimental consequences for society's weakest: they will not always be able to meet the newly emerged standard of reciprocity. This implies an erosion of the ideal of social protection and encourages new forms of social exclusion. As these changes in the social policy framework are not confined to the Belgian case alone, our analysis bears relevance for all European welfare states.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Reference97 articles.
1. Pierson P. (2011), ‘The welfare state over the very long run’, ZeS-Arbeitspapier No. 02/2011, http://hdl.handle.net/10419/46215 (consulted 21.3.12).
2. New Routes to Social Cohesion? Citizenship and the Social Investment State
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