Election Campaigns and Welfare State Change: Democratic Linkage and Leadership Under Pressure

Election Campaigns and Welfare State Change: Democratic Linkage and Leadership Under Pressure

Election Campaigns and Welfare State Change: Democratic Linkage and Leadership Under Pressure

Election Campaigns and Welfare State Change: Democratic Linkage and Leadership Under Pressure

eBook

$67.49  $89.99 Save 25% Current price is $67.49, Original price is $89.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

For over three decades, mature European welfare states have been on their way into an austerity phase marked by greater needs and more insecure revenues. A number of reform pressures-including population ageing, unemployment, economic globalization, and increased migration-call into question the economic sustainability and normative underpinnings of transfer systems and public services. And while welfare states long seemed resilient to growing challenges, it now seems clear that they are changing. Election Campaigns and Welfare State Change examines how political leaders and the public respond to reform pressures at a pivotal moment in a mass democracy: the election campaign. Do campaigns facilitate debate and attention to welfare state challenges? Do political parties present citizens with distinct choices as to how challenges might be met? Do leaders prepare citizens for the idea that some solutions may be painful? Do their messages have adaptive consequences for how the public perceives the need for reform? Do citizens adjust their normative support for welfare policies in the process? The answers to these questions affect how we understand welfare state change and representative democracy in an era of mounting challenges.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780192640277
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 07/11/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Staffan Kumlin is full Professor in Political Science at University of Oslo. Kumlin's research concerns comparative political behaviour, public opinion, and democracy in European welfare states. He is the author of The Personal and the Political: How Personal Welfare State Experiences Affect Political Trust and Ideology (Palgrave-Macmillan 2004) co-editor of How Welfare States Shape the Democratic Public: Policy Feedback, Participation, Voting, and Attitudes (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2014). He has also published in numerous scientific journals such as British Journal of Political Science and Comparative Political Studies. He co-designed the "welfare state module" in the 2016 European Social Survey 2016. In 2005 Staffan Kumlin became the first political scientist to receive a Pro Futura Fellowship from Riksbankens Jubileumsfond. Achim Goerres (PhD, LSE) has been full Professor of Empirical Political Science at the University of Duisburg-Essen since 2011. Goerres is a political scientist, political sociologist and political demographer who works at the intersection of comparative political behaviour and welfare state research with an emphasis on ageing and immigration. He is the Principal Investigator of POLITSOLID (2021-25), a project on political solidarities funded by a Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council and Co-Principal Investigator of the Immigrant German Election Studies I&II (2016 - 2024) funded by the German Research Foundation. He published in major journals, such as the British Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, Ethnic and Migration Studies, Journal of European Social Policy, Journal of Social Policy and Electoral Studies.

Table of Contents

Research Problems and Theoretical Framework1. Introduction: Democracy and Welfare State Change2. Democratic Linkage and the Party Decline Debate3. Democratic Leadership and the Study of Changing Welfare StatesCampaign Contents4. Up and Down with the Welfare State: Systemic Agenda Shifts in Europe5. What Politicians (Don't) Tell You about Welfare State ChangePublic Responses6. What Makes People Worry about the Welfare State? 7. Who Persuades and Who Responds? 8. Do People Adjust Policy Preferences to Reform Pressures? 8Conclusions9. Democracy and Welfare State Change Revisited
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews