Prix bas
CHF146.40
Impression sur demande - l'exemplaire sera imprimé pour vous.
Pas de droit de retour !
This book critically analyzes how European countries manage family-related challenges as they grapple with social and political transformations. It contributes to our understanding of contemporary family issues and serves as a bridge between academic analysis and practical policymaking.
In an era marked by dynamic and precarious societal shifts, evolving family structures, and intricate policy landscapes, the imperative to comprehensively examine family life, social risks, and policies becomes increasingly apparent. This contributed volume delves into how changes in family and gender roles, work, and household composition have affected the intricacies of parental leave policies, societal attitudes, and the inherent precarity within family life. The chapters, composed by esteemed authors, provide both a national and a cross-national perspective, offering invaluable insights into the diverse ways families and states navigate the complexities of contemporary society, highlighting the unaddressed vulnerabilities created by existing public policies. The contents explore the nexus of changes in family, policy, and welfare state responsibilities with a focus on:
Is the first book to consider how family life has become precarious and the implications of this for society Looks at forms of precariousness across the lifespan; considers positive/negative effects of precariousness on societies Provides an in-depth discussion of the relationship between precarity, the welfare state and the family
Auteur
Shirley Gatenio Gabel is a Professor and holds the Quaranta Chair for Justice for Children at Fordham University's Graduate School of Social Service in New York. Dr. Gatenio Gabel's research focuses on human rights and social policies, particularly those affecting children and families. She has served as a consultant to UNICEF, UNESCO and UN member countries on child poverty and advocacy strategies, and social protection in developing countries. She represents the International Association of Schools of Social Work at the United Nations. Her newest book is A Human Rights-based Approach to Justice in Social Work (Oxford in 2024). She is the editor of a book series on rights-based approaches to social work practice, authored A Rights-Based Approach to Social Policy, and is the co-founder/co-editor of the Journal of Human Rights and Social Work.
Piotr Michö is an associate professor at Poznan University of Economics and Business, Poland. His mostly interdisciplinary research work is mainly devoted to: family and family policy, quality of life, youth labour market, well-being and justice in social policy. He has managed numerous research projects funded by the European Commission, the Ministries of Education and Science, Visegradfund, the National Science Centre, the National Academic Exchange Agency, etc. He has been on research internships in numerous universities and research centres in number of countries: USA, Netherlands, Scotland, Portugal, Australia and many more. He is a member of the Polish Academy of Science (since 2020), The Network for European Social Policy Analysis (board member 2015- 2020), and The International Society of Quality of Life Studies (Board of Directors since 2019).
Contenu
PART I. Introduction of Concepts and Theories.- Chapter 1. Charting new courses for families and family policies by Shirley Gatenio Gabel.- PART II. The Nexus of Changes in Family, Policy, and Welfare State Responsibilities Parental Leave Policies and Effects.- Chapter 2. Parental leave policies, parental diversity, and precarity in family life: A cross-national comparison by Alison Koslowski.- Chapter 3. The Impact of Employment Precariousness on Parental Leave Benefits in Southern European Countries (Portugal, Spain, Italy, And Greece) by Susana Atalaia and Mafalda Leitão.- PART III. The Nexus of Changes in Family, Policy, and Welfare State Responsibilities Lone Parenthood.- Chapter 4. Precarious parenthood after separation: Who will be economically responsible for the children? The case of Sweden by Ann-Zofie Duvander and Johanna Schiratzki.- Chapter 5. Framing the Deservingness of Families How Government Discourse Contributes to Growing Precarity of Single-Parent Families in Hungary? by Boglárka Herke.- PART IV. The Nexus of Changes in Family, Policy, and Welfare State Responsibilities The Effects of Family Policy on Entering and Exiting the Labor Force.- Chapter 6. The Precariousness of Transition to Adulthood and Social Policy in Poland by Piotr Micho.- Chapter 7. Formal and Informal Social Security in Old Age: The Contribution of Welfare-state, Inter-generational Support and Precarity Perspectives by Jolanta Aidukait and Sarmit Mikulionien.- PART V. The Nexus of Changes in Family, Policy, and Welfare State Responsibilities Changing Attitudes Around Gender Roles and Policy.- Chapter 8. Employment Precarity and Parenting Leaves in Croatia by Ivana Dobroti.- Chapter 9. Gender Attitudes in the Third Decade of Post-Communism: Diminishing Space for Precariousness? by Steven Saxonberg & Tomá Sirovátka.- PART VI. Discussion and Conclusions.- Chapter 10. The Tricky Business of Policymaking: Conclusions by Piotr Micho.