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  1. 14. Juni 2013 · Germany's CDU encapsulates the core dilemma facing all of continental European Christian Democracy. The religiously based brand of welfare capitalism that traditionally set these parties apart is being undermined by broad socio-economic and political trends.

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  2. The Christian democratic welfare state aims at supporting families and often relies on intermediary institutions to deliver social services and social insurance, often with the support of the state.

  3. 6. Nov. 2011 · This article investigates why Christian Democrats (though with some inconsistencies) promoted “social-democratic” family policies guided by the adult worker rather than by the male breadwinner model. Illuminating the politics of recent family policy reforms, the electoral rationale for this modernization of family policy, the ...

    • Timo Fleckenstein
    • 2011
  4. As it is not possible to develop an extensive analysis, this article will focus on three debates : the analysis of the various Welfare States and their possible classifications, the relation between globalisation and the evolution of the Welfare States, the new political configurations of the action within the Welfare States. At the same time ...

    • Dr. Julius Byaruhanga
  5. “Religion, Class Coalitions, and Welfare States is the most authoritative work so far on the impact of religion on welfare state development. It provides us with both a grand theoretical perspective and hugely rich analysis of how Protestantism and Catholicism meshed with politics and class in the evolution of social policies in Europe and ...

  6. 28. Jan. 2010 · In Italy, both the institutional features and the political strength of Democrazia Cristiana ([DC], i.e., the Christian Democratic party) are undeniably present, lending plausibility to the argument that Christian Democracy built the Italian welfare state.

  7. Christian democracy very quickly became a prominent political force in several European countries with large Catholic populations, other than Spain and Portugal where totalitarian regimes remained in control. By 1948, Christian democrat political parties had become dominant or politically prominent in Austria, Belgium, France, Italy, the ...