Print

Print


The Young, The Old And The State:
Social Care Systems in Five Industrial Nations

Edited by Anneli Anttonen, Professor of Social Policy, University of
Tampere, Finland, John Baldock, Professor of Social Policy, University
of Kent, UK and Jorma Sipilä, Rector and Professor of Social Policy,
University of Tampere, Finland

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

‘This book, edited by three well-known and widely respected academics
reflects the diversity of social care while simultaneously striving to
identify common patterns, trends and underpinning philosophies. It makes

an important new contribution to understanding why patterns of social
care differ between and within countries, and the consequences of these
variations. In explaining contemporary patterns of social care for
children and older people in the countries studied, the contributors
turn to historical accounts to explain the current apparent lack of
coherence. Underpinning the diverse patterns of social care development
are the transformation of social care from a private good to a public
commodity; tensions between universality and selectivity; and new
tensions between individual rights and family responses. As well as
providing detailed and up to the minute accounts of the different care
systems in the countries studied, this book makes a major new
contribution to our understanding of the complex and conflicting
pressures underlying post-industrial welfare states.’
– Caroline Glendinning, University of Manchester, UK

This is a comparative account of social care services for children and
older people in five key industrial nations (Finland, Germany, Japan,
the United Kingdom and the United States). The authors break new ground
by moving beyond institutional description and seeking to understand the

normative and moral qualities of welfare systems. The book builds on
existing theories of welfare state regimes by extending the analysis to
the arena of social care.

A full and fascinating account is provided of the historical, economic
and political origins of childcare and care for older people in each of
the five countries. These analyses are then used as the basis for a
theoretical account of the developmental trajectories of social care
systems. The book proposes that there are common pressures at work in
all industrial nations driving their welfare systems to similar forms of

organisation and structure. However, these trends are mediated by
important differences in culture and history.

The Young, the Old and the State is an eminently readable and accessible

book, and will be warmly welcomed by academics and researchers in social

and public policy, health and social care and welfare economics. It will

also be of interest to policymakers and NGOs involved in welfare and
social care provision and provide a useful source for students on
undergraduate and graduate programmes.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Contents: 1. The Importance of Social Care 2. Social Care in Finland:
Stronger and Weaker Forms of Universalism 3. Social Care Services for
Children and Older People in Germany: Distinct and Separate Histories 4.

Care for Children and Older People in Japan: Modernizing the Traditional

5. Social Care in the United Kingdom: A Pattern of Discretionary Social
Administration 6. Care for Children and Older People in the United
States: Laggard or Merely Different? 7. Patterns of Social Care in Five
Industrial Societies: Explaining Diversity. Index.
Contributors include: A. Anttonen, J. Baldock, A. Evers, J. Heffernan,
T. Kröger, C. Sachße, J. Sipilä, M. Takahashi

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

UK Publication Hardback April 2003 224 pp 1 84064 628 4 £49.95
US Publication Hardback June 2003 $80.00
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
http://www.e-elgar.co.uk/