The Scandinavian social service state in comparison

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Standard

The Scandinavian social service state in comparison. / Abrahamson, Peter.

Social Care Services: The Key to the Scandinavian Welfare Model. ed. / Jorma Sipilä. Aldershot : Taylor & Francis, 2020. p. 156-177.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Harvard

Abrahamson, P 2020, The Scandinavian social service state in comparison. in J Sipilä (ed.), Social Care Services: The Key to the Scandinavian Welfare Model. Taylor & Francis, Aldershot, pp. 156-177. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429437519

APA

Abrahamson, P. (2020). The Scandinavian social service state in comparison. In J. Sipilä (Ed.), Social Care Services: The Key to the Scandinavian Welfare Model (pp. 156-177). Taylor & Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429437519

Vancouver

Abrahamson P. The Scandinavian social service state in comparison. In Sipilä J, editor, Social Care Services: The Key to the Scandinavian Welfare Model. Aldershot: Taylor & Francis. 2020. p. 156-177 https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429437519

Author

Abrahamson, Peter. / The Scandinavian social service state in comparison. Social Care Services: The Key to the Scandinavian Welfare Model. editor / Jorma Sipilä. Aldershot : Taylor & Francis, 2020. pp. 156-177

Bibtex

@inbook{44d5544c44c947318b8d45dc15982dab,
title = "The Scandinavian social service state in comparison",
abstract = "Scandinavian welfare will be compared to the development in the rest of Western Europe with a view to the future. The break-down of total social expenditure on transfers and services reveals that the Scandinavian countries have a significantly larger share of social resources communicated in the form of personal social services. The Scandinavian countries are affected by the consequences of globalization, and that the “Scandinavian model of welfare” so far it has existed, in the future will take on a more mixed character. In the Scandinavian countries, the public sector pays a larger share and the employers a smaller share. When discussing perspectives of Scandinavian welfare in a European context, it is, however, unavoidable to dig into the welfare modeling business, since future solidarities are already being thematized with reference to different regimes. Market imperatives are reflected; but the solutions recommended are not of a universal, Scandinavian Model type.",
author = "Peter Abrahamson",
note = "First Published1997",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.4324/9780429437519",
language = "English",
pages = "156--177",
editor = "Jorma Sipil{\"a}",
booktitle = "Social Care Services",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

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T1 - The Scandinavian social service state in comparison

AU - Abrahamson, Peter

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PY - 2020

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N2 - Scandinavian welfare will be compared to the development in the rest of Western Europe with a view to the future. The break-down of total social expenditure on transfers and services reveals that the Scandinavian countries have a significantly larger share of social resources communicated in the form of personal social services. The Scandinavian countries are affected by the consequences of globalization, and that the “Scandinavian model of welfare” so far it has existed, in the future will take on a more mixed character. In the Scandinavian countries, the public sector pays a larger share and the employers a smaller share. When discussing perspectives of Scandinavian welfare in a European context, it is, however, unavoidable to dig into the welfare modeling business, since future solidarities are already being thematized with reference to different regimes. Market imperatives are reflected; but the solutions recommended are not of a universal, Scandinavian Model type.

AB - Scandinavian welfare will be compared to the development in the rest of Western Europe with a view to the future. The break-down of total social expenditure on transfers and services reveals that the Scandinavian countries have a significantly larger share of social resources communicated in the form of personal social services. The Scandinavian countries are affected by the consequences of globalization, and that the “Scandinavian model of welfare” so far it has existed, in the future will take on a more mixed character. In the Scandinavian countries, the public sector pays a larger share and the employers a smaller share. When discussing perspectives of Scandinavian welfare in a European context, it is, however, unavoidable to dig into the welfare modeling business, since future solidarities are already being thematized with reference to different regimes. Market imperatives are reflected; but the solutions recommended are not of a universal, Scandinavian Model type.

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DO - 10.4324/9780429437519

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BT - Social Care Services

A2 - Sipilä, Jorma

PB - Taylor & Francis

CY - Aldershot

ER -

ID: 247873589