Introduction. Ambivalences of the Rising Welfare Service State – Hopes and Hazard of Modern Welfare Architectures

Authors

Keywords:

new modes of welfare production, social integration, globalized economy, cultural diversity, Welfare Service State

Abstract

The Welfare states in Europe are changing. Traditional strategies of welfare which are based on income-replacing compensation for market failures, existential threats and standard biographical problems become more and more replaced by so-called social investment strategies, focusing on preventive policies, personalised interventions and social investments in the human capital of their beneficiaries. In particular, service-based welfare measures are becoming the core of modern welfare architectures: The Welfare Service State rises.

This new welfare architecture is accompanied by a significant recalibration of the cognitive and normative orientations about what welfare policy should achieve as well as far-reaching reforms of the governance of social services. In 24 contributions, participants of the Symposium Ambivalences of the Rising Welfare Service State approach the task of making this new type of welfare state accessible to analyses and scrutinies.

Author Biographies

  • Jean-Michel Bonvin, University of Geneva
    Faculté des Sciences de la Société, Institut de Démographie et Socioéconomie
  • Hans-Uwe Otto, Bielefeld University
    Faculty of Educational Science; Bielefeld Center for Education and Capability Research
  • Arne Wohlfarth, Bielefeld University
    Faculty of Educational Science; Bielefeld Center for Education and Capability Research
  • Holger Ziegler, Bielefeld University
    Faculty for Educational Science; Working Group 8 – Social Work

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Section

Special Issue: "Ambivalences of the Rising Welfare Service State – Hopes and Hazard of Modern Welfare Architectures"