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COMPLETE SUMMARY! Social Challenges lectures

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This entails a very detailed, extensive and comprehensible summary of all the lectures! I studied this summary and got an 8.5 for my exam.

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Subido en
7 de diciembre de 2025
Número de páginas
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Escrito en
2025/2026
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1: Welfare state and social policy

Welfare state as safety net since development, it's always been this way → but: no longer functioning like it did

The welfare state
-​ Welfare state: as society, nation state, people inside should have some reasonable standard of living, eg. food,
roof, education, health → having social citizenship rights
-​ The welfare state embodies the formulation of a social guarantee: society, organized as a nation state,
guarantees all citizens a reasonable standard of living.
-​ Based on idea of social (citizenship) rights (Marshall, 1949): the rights of individuals as recognized members of
a nation state, including social rights was quite broad, encompassing a wide array of rights and benefits, e.g.,
work (full employment), income protection, housing, education and health care
-​ Eg. having dutch passport gives you certain rights form that nation state, social rights → reasonable
standard of living → government is responsible
-​ In essence: social rights ensure a minimum standard of living. Spicker (2023: 139): “A welfare state offers a
guarantee of standards, and ultimately it bears that responsibility whenever no one else does.”
-​ But: what does this minimal standard look like? eg. US is welfare state and has very different views on
minimal standard
-​ Welfare state: housing, education, housing, health, poor aid

The welfare state (2)
-​ One of the most powerful institutions of the 20th century and beyond
-​ which other institution guarantees standard of living? not church, ngo's or others
-​ The result of a long historical development: most studies on 20th century but can trace back to 16th century
(Spicker, 2023)
-​ most of welfare state comes about in 20th century
-​ Includes social security, health care, education, social housing, social welfare

The welfare state: Key differences
-​ Historical trajectories and objectives
-​ Some commonalities in trajectories, but generally, countries go through the development different,
depending on these factors
-​ Timing, pace, mode of industrialization
-​ Political/institutional settings
-​ not actually the government, but also other actors when talking about welfare state
-​ Financing (e.g., general taxes vs. contributions)
-​ some pay through general taxes, other focus on contributions, ie. taxes your employer pays for
unemployment etc.
-​ Eligibility for welfare state benefits (e.g., workers; residents; targeted groups)
-​ eg. subsidies, tuition for school, pensions, who can get (eg.) money for what?
-​ Benefit levels (flat-rate vs. earnings-related)
-​ flat-rate = everybody gets the same thing
-​ earnings-related = better (eg.) work is better earning (eg. belastingschalen)

Bismarck (vs Beveridge)
-​ Bismarck: German chancellor mid-late 19th century; policies for blue collar workers in 1880’s in Germany forms a
basis for welfare states
-​ "we need to come up with policies to cover blue collar workers" → ie. maintain their income when
something happens to them, they are the breadwinner
-​ Objective: Bismarckian welfare state policies are aimed at income maintenance
-​ you need to pay into the system to get something out of it → sets the stage for welfare state favoring
people who work (the longest, the most)
-​ Bismarckian policies are defined by:
-​ a focus on social insurance
-​ providing earnings-related benefits for employees
-​ in general, entitlements are conditional (based on a satisfactory contribution record)
-​ financing is usually a contributory scheme (employers/employees)

Beveridge (vs Bismarck)

, -​ British Lord Beveridge: Beveridge plan (1942); used post-WWII to help protect peace and security; became a
blueprint for many welfare states
-​ Objective: Beveridgean welfare state policies are aimed at preventing poverty
-​ Five long-term goals:
1.​ Security for people who lose their job or otherwise are unable to take part in the labour market (elderly,
the sick, pregnant women)
2.​ Medical care
3.​ Housing
4.​ Sufficient education
5.​ Sufficient employment, or the avoidance of unemployment
-​ Eventually UK made welfare state with very minimal intervention, government only interfering when you are very
low in minimal living quality

Understand to give as example, not
knowing by heart → what is that
minimal standard?




Golden Age
-​ +/-1945-1975
-​ many jobs, little unemployment, because of this low risk → many protections for job loss → there was
enough money and not low unemployment anyway
-​ after WWII, period with much economic development and many jobs and government with new
opportunities to protect the workforce
-​ Expansion of welfare state programmes
-​ Centred on male breadwinner
-​ if they lose their job → entire family is at risk of poverty
-​ High employment, low unemployment
-​ High economic growth
-​ And then: oil crises; unemployment; stagflation
-​ many unemployed, economic growth goes down + inflation = stagflation → problem: welfare states needs
to pay many people
-​ Expansion focused on ‘striking a balance’ in social justice terms: liberty vs. equality, expanding individuals’ social
rights (Hemerijck, 2022)
-​ liberty ie. own autonomy of individuals

Crisis and/or transformation
-​ Crisis: 1975 - ? Transformation: 1980s - ?
-​ Austerity / retrenchment: lowering expenditures
-​ austerity ie. spending less money, but: not enough to cover depths → so also lower subsidies for
unemployment → ie. refocus who is eligible (= retrenchment)
-​ Redistribution of state responsibility & decentralization
-​ welfare state asks themselves why are we responsible for this? → lets hand it over to local governments
(ie. decentralizations) → redistribute who is responsible → from safety net to trampoline → not catch
people, but bounce them back
-​ Shift from a safety net to a trampoline
-​ welfare state is born with idea to catch people when they can't work → shift to also individuals
responsible 'we want you to work, if you don't, that's also your problem, not just ours' - welfare state

, The welfare state (6): modern transformations
-​ despite who is responsible, still common believe welfare state is there to help, a lot of belief in the welfare state
-​ 2000s - onwards
-​ Clash between push for retrenchment and high welfare state popularity
-​ Continued adjustment of ‘old’ social risks; pressure of ‘new’ social risks
-​ eg. not having enough education to go from job to job, combining job with care, being zzp and having
more risks
-​ Shift towards increasingly selective policies
-​ instead of everyone, only have policy for some people (eg. for more ... for women to support them)
-​ Changed socio-cultural and economic circumstances
-​ paid work is best way forward for welfare state and for individuals
-​ Social investment: policy idea since early 2000s

Summing up welfare state development




Policies and interventions for addressing social challenges
-​ policies are a way to intervene → what came first: policies or interventions? debate
-​ eg. if we want parents to take time off when having baby → policy for paid parental leave
-​ eg. heterosexual parents share parenting 50/50 → policy to incentivize fathers to take leave

What is social policy?
-​ Social policy: How societies globally meet human needs, e.g., for security, education, work, health and wellbeing
-​ welfare state is bigger institution, social policy can occur in welfare state
-​ Concerns state (government) and societal responses to societal challenges (e.g., social, demographic and/or
economic change).
-​ many NGO's act as mediators, that is a social policy non-governmental
-​ Multiple actors are involved: governments (supranational, national, regional, local), families, civil society, the
market.
-​ market, ie. market matters for the costs of certain things
-​ eg. unions for workforce → childcare debate between unions and employers → then government got
involved to make policies
-​ These actors work to provide services and support to individuals, families and groups throughout their lives.
-​ ‘…an institutionalized response to social and economic problems’.
-​ Social policy 2.0: how welfare states “attempt to identify and address social inequalities as well as social risks
that have societal consequences.”
-​ not getting involved is still an active choice by government
-​ Spicker (2023): distinction between public policy (e.g., policing, roads, sanitation) and social policy (e.g.,
education, health care, social security, housing, child protection, social care)
-​ Policies for society vs social policy? (difference is not really relevant)
-​ Affecting social relationships
-​ With government setting a framework and basic standards
-​ Note: policies (including examples provided by Spicker (2023)) driven by normative ideas of human
behaviour
-​ eg. in US there is this idea that some people are just lazy and unwilling to work vs. eg. idea that
some people are unlucky and unable to work
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