1st Edition

Politics of Segmentation Party Competition and Social Protection in Europe

By Georg Picot Copyright 2012
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    When political parties make policy decisions they are influenced by the competition they face from other parties. This book examines how party competition and party systems affect reforms of social protection. Featuring a historical comparison of Italy and Germany post-1945, the book shows how a high number of parties and ideological polarisation lead to fragmented and unequal social benefits.

    Utilising a comparative approach, the author brings together two important issues in welfare state research that have been insufficiently investigated. Firstly, the complex influence of party competition on social policy-making, and second, how some social groups enjoy better social protection than others. Moving beyond the two countries of the case study, the book proposes an innovative framework for studying segmentation of social protection and applies this framework to a wider set of 15 advanced welfare states. Overall, this book draws together different strands of research on political parties and on welfare states, and introduces a new argument on how party politics shapes social policy.

    An invaluable text on the political economy of the welfare state, Politics of Segmentation will be of interest to scholars of political economy, social policy and comparative politics.

    Introduction  1. Party Competition and Social Protection  2. Comparing Italy and Germany  Part 1: Policy Segmentation Across Countries and Time  3. Segmentation of Unemployment Benefits in Advanced Welfare States Today  4. Italy and Germany: Policy Divergence after World War II  5. Italy and Germany: Changing Trends during Welfare State Restructuring  Part 2: The Impact of Party Competition  6. Explaining Labour Market Reforms in Italy and Germany  7. Italy and Germany: Political Driving Forces behind Different Post-War Paths  8. Germany: Two Political Logics of Segmenting Reforms  9. Italy: Party System Change Facilitating De-Segmentation  10. Party Competition and Benefit Segmentation Across Advanced Welfare States  11. Conclusions and Future Research

    Biography

    Georg Picot is Lecturer in Comparative Social Policy at the University of Oxford, UK.