Buch, Englisch, 290 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
Reihe: Social Europe Series
The Belgian Case
Buch, Englisch, 290 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
Reihe: Social Europe Series
ISBN: 978-94-000-0166-4
Verlag: Intersentia Publishers
The authors of this book critically assess the current stage of social federalism in Belgium and ask how against the background of the major challenge of an ageing population an effective social policy can be shaped. The book considers at which level the bulk of an effective social policy is best situated, what the role of the sub-national entities can be, and which limitations are imposed by the constitutional and European framework. The various forms of power allocation are considered for social federalism in Belgium.
From the perspective of various scientific disciplines and averse to any political dogma, this book pleads for a more nuanced thinking on social federalism in Belgium.
With contributions by J. Beyers, P. Bursens, B. Cantillon, N. Mussche, B. Peeters, P. Popelier, H. Van Goethem, J. Vanpraet, J. Velaers and H. Verschueren. And reflections by K. Banting, A. Benz, C. Jeffery, J. Poirier and F.W. Scharpf.
About this book
‘In this very informative book, eminent scientists tackle the way in which social policy in Belgium is developed on a federal basis in what could be called a new European “laboratory”. […] The book is […] extremely comprehensive and contains several contributions to demonstrate how the European dimension has a huge impact on the domestic constitutional workings of Union member states…’
Michel Theys in Bulletin Quotidien Europe (15 June 2011)
‘The present book comes just at the right time. […] The editors must be applauded for bringing together authors from law, sociology, history and political science on this topic. The resulting book looks at the current architecture from multiple – but, for the most part, complementary – perspectives. Moreover, the explicit comparative framing, aimed at an international readership, is very welcome. It makes some of the arguments of the Belgian debate – which, naturally, takes place mostly in Dutch and French – available to an international audience. One could almost say that the book adds a ‘new’ case to the comparative literature – and not just any case, but one that is still evolving and displays numerous fascinating policy dynamics. [this] is an impressive interdisciplinary volume which deals with a fascinating case. It should be read not only by scholars of Belgian politics and policy but by everyone who is interested in the study of federalism nd the welfare state.’
Peter Starke in 2012 EJSS 52