1st Edition

Welfare Policy from Below Struggles Against Social Exclusion in Europe

By Arno Pilgram, Heinz Steinert Copyright 2003

    Available in paperback for the first time, Welfare Policy from Below is the most comprehensive study available of social exclusion in contemporary Europe. Invigorating and informative, the book puts forward a new form of 'social exclusion knowledge', based on an innovative conceptual and theoretical framework and a comparative empirical study of eight European cities. The case studies - encompassing research in Germany, Austria, the UK, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and Spain - focus on a range of problems associated with exclusion. Issues such as poverty, housing, work, migration, gender equality and the family are considered in the context of different European welfare regimes, providing insights into the experiences of ordinary people facing exclusionary challenges. The distinguished contributors argue that social security and welfare must provide the infrastructure for the coping strategies of those at risk of exclusion. Featuring a substantive new preface which includes contemporary discussions in European welfare policy, Welfare Policy from Below will be invaluable to policy-makers as well as academic researchers.

    Contents: Introduction: the cultures of welfare and exclusion, Heinz Steinert. The Project Framework: Limits of market society: European perspectives, Ian Taylor; Inclusion, exclusion: towards a dynamic approach, Georg Vobruba; Social exclusion: strategies for coping with and avoiding it, Heinz Steinert. Conceptual and Theoretical Matters: Participation and social exclusion: a conceptual framework, Heinz Steinert; Towards understanding situations of social exclusion, Bridgette Wessels and Siep Miedema. The Presentation of Social Exclusion: Forms and Norms: Coping with social exclusion: from acceptance to indignation, Tomke Böhnisch and Helga Cremer-Schäfer; Normalization, symptoms and reductions of complexity: unsatisfactory accounts of unsatisfactory living, Gerhard Hanak. Coping and its Resources: The Welfare-Work-Family Mix: Welfare or what? conditions for coping within different socio-political structures: the examples of Sweden and Spain, Anita Rönneling and Àngela Gabàs i Gasa; Resources, coping and subjective experiences, Monia Giovannetti and Fabio Quassoli; The meaning of work and experiences of disqualification, Helga Cremer-Schäfer; Subsistence, Henrik Tham; (Ab)using the family, Tomke Böhnisch, Àngela Gabàs i Gasa, Monia Giovannetti and Fabio Quassoli. Coping and its Resources: The Usefulness and Widespread Absence of Community: Community, subculture, secondary association as a resource: patterns of association to counter exclusion and configured networks to manage exclusion, Bridgette Wessels; Innovative coping strategies and social resource structures, Siep Miedema and Janine Janssen; 'On the spot' experiences and perceptions of social exclusion: comparing local communities and urban settings, Gerhard Hanak. The Market and the Law: Limits of Coping: Infrastructure gaps: housing problems in Bologna and Frankfurt, Fabio Quassoli and Tomke Böhnisch; Legal exclusion and social exclusion: 'legal' and 'illegal' migrants, Inge Karazman-Morawetz and Anita Rönneling; Double difficulty: female and foreigner, Bridgette Wessels, Janine Janssen and Siep Miedema. Conclusions and Policy Implications: Welfare policies as resource management, Christa Pelikan, Arno Pilgram, Heinz Steinert and Georg Vobruba; Bibliography; Technical annex; Index.

    Biography

    Heinz Steinert is Professor of Sociology at the J.W.Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Arno Pilgram is Director of the Institute for the Sociology of Law and Criminology, Vienna, Austria.

    ’This important book contains an original and significant comparative anthropology of social exclusion in contemporary Europe. The research accounts will inform both academic debate and the development of policy. Of particular importance are the distinctions made between inclusion and participation, and the argument that the latter rather than the former is the opposite of exclusion. The implication that public policy against exclusion must accept and endorse diversity in the achievement of participation is of great significance for all concerned with these issues.’ David Byrne, University of Durham, UK ’A rare interdisciplinary and comparative analysis of how people navigate the treacherous divides and frail bridges between market, family, community, and state in constructing their life strategies, Welfare Policy from Below enriches our understanding of the dynamics and experience of social inequality and marginality today. It will be of particular interest to all those, scholars, policy makers and citizens, concerned with building a genuine social Europe.’ Loïc Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley, USA ’This study relies on dynamic, qualitative and comparative approaches and offers researchers as well as policy makers valuable insights into how social exclusion works and how to overcome it via a mix of resources, be they individual, institutional or network based. All essays partake in the common frame of pleading for a new vision for the European welfare state: We need a shift from a "logic of security based on entitlements to a "logic of participation founded on an unconditional provision of the basic resources.’ Stephan Leibfried, Co-director and Petra Buhr, Assistant Professor, University of Bremen, Germany ’The importance of the perspectives of the socially excluded is frequently acknowledged in other studies, but this book breaks new ground in accessing those perspectives and exploring them so thoroughly