Abstract
This article provides a short yet comprehensive historical review
of ‘flexicurity,’ an equally acclaimed and debated public policy of the first two
decades of the 20th century. Early understandings of ‘flexibility’ and ‘security’ in
labor economics placed the two terms in antithetic positions, generally defining
‘flexibility’ as the lack of ‘security’ or considering ‘security’ as the cause for the
lack of ‘flexibility.’ The change in social standards in the early 1990s generated
the emergence of ‘transitional labor markets,’ a concept that further facilitated the
appearance of a new labor market policy – ‘flexicurity.’ The article presents each
of these stages in the development of flexicurity. It describes the stories of the three
most influential flexicurity cases - the Dutch, the Danish, and the European Union.
Publisher
Babes-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca
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