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Building the eco-social state: do welfare regimes matter?

[journal article]

Koch, Max
Fritz, Martin

Abstract

Authors such as Dryzek, Gough and Meadowcroft have indicated that social-democratic welfare states could be in a better position to deal with development o f the ‘green’ or ‘eco’ state, and the intersection o f social and environmental policies, than conservative or liberal welfare regimes (synergy ... view more

Authors such as Dryzek, Gough and Meadowcroft have indicated that social-democratic welfare states could be in a better position to deal with development o f the ‘green’ or ‘eco’ state, and the intersection o f social and environmental policies, than conservative or liberal welfare regimes (synergy hypothesis). However, this hypothesis has as yet not been examined in comparative empirical research. Based on comparative empirical data from EUROSTAT, the World Bank, the OECD, the Global Footprint Network and the International Social Survey Programme, we are carrying out two research operations: First, by applying correspondence analysis, we contrast the macro-structural welfare and sustainability indicators of thirty countries and ask whether clusters largely follow the synergy hypothesis. Second, we raise the issue of whether differences in the institutional and organisational capabilities of combining welfare with environmental policies are reflected in people’s attitudes and opinions. With regard to the first issue, our results suggest that there is no ‘automatic’ development o f the ecostate based on already existing advanced welfare institutions. Representatives of all welfare regimes are spread across established, deadlocked, failing, emerging and endangered ecostates. As for the second issue, the results are mixed. While responses to the statements ‘economic growth always harms the environment’ and ‘governments should pass laws to make ordinary people protect the environment, even if it interferes with people’s rights to make their own decisions’ did not vary according to welfare regimes, people from social-democratic countries expressed more often than average their willingness to accept cuts in their standard of living in order to protect the environment. (author's abstract)... view less

Keywords
institutional factors; social democracy; quantitative method; environmental behavior; sustainability; correspondence analysis; environmental policy; national politics; social policy; ISSP; environmental consciousness; regime; attitude; international comparison; welfare state; liberalism; market economy; party in power

Classification
Social Policy
Ecology, Environment

Method
quantitative empirical

Document language
English

Publication Year
2014

Page/Pages
p. 679-703

Journal
Journal of Social Work Practice, 43 (2014) 4

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S004727941400035X

ISSN
0047-2794

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Deposit Licence - No Redistribution, No Modifications

With the permission of the rights owner, this publication is under open access due to a (DFG-/German Research Foundation-funded) national or Alliance license.


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Home  |  Legal notices  |  Operational concept  |  Privacy policy
© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.