Print

Print


***Apologies for cross-posting***

Dear colleagues,

Laura Seelkopf (Jacobs University, now University of Bremen) and I are 
organizing a workshop at next year's ECPR Joint Sessions in Warsaw (29 
March - 2 April 2015, University of Warsaw). The topic should be of 
interest for welfare state researchers from various disciplines.

The deadline for paper proposals is *1 December 2014*. Abstracts *must 
*be submitted via the ECPR website.

Workshop Title: *Social Policy by Other Means: Alternatives to State 
Welfare for Redistribution and Insurance -- Historical and Comparative 
Perspectives* (Workshop 13)

Abstract: Life can be "poor, nasty, brutish and short" (Hobbes). To 
insure their citizens against the hardships of life, Western European 
governments have since the 1880s introduced social policies such as 
health insurance or pensions that constitute the core of what we now 
understand as the modern welfare state. The strong focus on these 
particular policies has served comparative welfare state research well 
in analyzing the reduction of life-risks in advanced democracies over 
the last century. Yet, increasingly, this focus is too narrow. 
Especially outside the OECD, the old approach falls short. Often, the 
nation state is not even the main provider of social security. What is 
more, the political cleavages and mechanisms shaping welfare policies in 
non-OECD countries are very distinct. Urban-rural and ethnic conflicts 
tend to play a much larger role for instance than the traditional 
capital-labor relationship. Depending on the economic and political 
structure, basic health care or agricultural policies matter more than, 
say, pension reform. In a similar way, new ways of ensuring equity and 
risk protection are gaining ground in industrialized countries as well. 
Policies like consumer protection and the integration of immigrants have 
at first sight little to do with classic welfare state instruments. What 
are the political dynamics of such policies and how do they relate to 
more traditional redistributive and safety net measures? We invite 
papers that analyze 'social policies by other means' in both OECD and 
non-OECD countries. We thereby aim at a dialogue between traditional 
comparative welfare state research and other sub-disciplines, theories, 
historical and geographical lenses.

Participants: We encourage a broad range of participants to submit 
papers, ranging from development and
international relations scholars through historians to comparative 
welfare state researchers,
from country, policy or area experts to broad comparativists, and from 
Ph.D. candidates to
established scholars. We especially strive to secure some funding to 
support the participation
of scholars from non-OECD countries.

For more information, including a longer outline, please visit the ECPR 
website <https://ecpr.eu/Events/PanelDetails.aspx?PanelID=2460&EventID=90>.

General information about the 2015 Joint Sessions can be found here 
<https://ecpr.eu/Events/EventDetails.aspx?EventID=90>.

If you have any questions please don't hesitate to contact us: 
[log in to unmask] & [log in to unmask]

We would be happy if you could forward the call to people you know who 
may be interested.

Kind regards,
Peter


-- 


Peter Starke
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science and Public Management
Centre for Welfare State Research
https://www.facebook.com/WelfareStudies

Tel.    +4565504307
[log in to unmask]
Webhttp://www.sam.sdu.dk/ansat/starke
Addr.   Campusvej 55, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK
_______________________________________________________________
Campusvej 55 * DK-5230 * Odense M * Denmark * Tel. +45 6550 1000 *www.sdu.dk