Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Over the last thirty years, the German welfare state has dealt with a number of distinct challenges, that is, problem complexes that were dominant in the public discourse for several years. In what follows I will discuss these dominant problems and reforms in roughly chronological order.

  2. 25. Okt. 2008 · On the European continent, in turn, we find welfare states that are the product of a coalition between Social and Christian Democracy; in some countries where the left has been divided into a socialist and communist party with the latter banned from governmental power for most of the post-war period (as in Italy or France 7), the welfare state was a product of Christian Democratic hegemony ...

  3. the same extent as the Social Democratic welfare states. Christian Democracy-cum-Social Catholicism rather produced and preserved a traditional, patriarchic, status-oriented model of society. It is this reading of the history of the western welfare state, that owes much to the power resources and regime approach, which is challenged in this ...

  4. Of special importance are the contrasting effects of Christian democracy and social democracy on transfer payments, social benefits expenditure, and total government revenue. There is also a strong effect of constitutional structure on welfare state effort, a finding that provides the first solid support for the state-centered perspective in a quantitative analysis.

  5. market-based private insurance. Which of the following is mostly based on social insurance? Christian democratic welfare state. Liberal welfare states put great emphasis on ______. individual autonomy. A national health system is also called a ______. single-payer system. Conditional cash transfer (CCT) programs were first implemented in ______.

  6. 28. Jan. 2010 · Although proponents of this strong class power thesis acknowledged that Catholicism was a factor in shaping the institutional features of welfare states in Christian Democratic nations, they otherwise neglected the effects of religious doctrine, anticlericalism, Protestantism, and church–state conflict on welfare state development. Political class theories fail to consider how these forces ...

  7. MPIfG Book. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. 304 pages. ISBN 978-0-521-89791-4 (hardback) ISBN 978-0-521-72395-4 (paperback) "Religion, Class Coalitions, and Welfare States is the most authoritative work so far on the impact of religion on welfare state development." (Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra)