1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910472626203321

Autore

Bossert Carl Friedrich, Dr.

Titolo

Power, Alliances, and Redistribution : The Politics of Social Protection for Low-Income Earners in Argentina, 1943-2015 [[electronic resource]] / Carl Friedrich Bossert

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leverkusen, : Budrich Academic Press, 2021

ISBN

3-96665-998-0

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (373 p.)

Soggetti

Lateinamerika

Latin America

Machtressourcenansatz

Machtressourcentheorie

political economy

Politische Ökonomie

power resources approach

power resources theory

redistribution

social inequality

social policy

social security

Soziale Ungleichheit

Sozialpolitik

Sozialsystem

Staatstheorie

state theory

Umverteilung

welfare state

Wohlfahrtsstaat

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

1.    INTRODUCTION                                          2.    THEORIZING THE



POLITICS OF SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR LOW-INCOME EARNERS IN LATIN AMERICA                      2.1.    Review: Welfare State Theory and Social Protection for Low-Income Earners                                  2.2.    Theoretical Framework                                  2.2.1. The Power Resources Approach and Latin America: Strengths, Weaknesses and Promising Modifications                  2.2.2. The Main Argument: Power Resources and Governing Alliances                              2.2.3. Understanding the Role of Different Actors: An Analytical Framework      2.2.4. The Role of Different Actors: Hypotheses                      2.2.5. (Re-)Conceptualizing Popular Class Power in Social Policy-Making: Associational, Structural, Institutional, and Discursive Power Resources      3.    METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH                              4.    THE POLITICS OF SOCIAL PROTECTION FOR LOW-INCOME EARNERS      IN ARGENTINA, 1943-2015  4.1.    Historical Background and Social Policy before 1943                  4.2.    Popular Class Incorporation and Social Policy Expansion, 1943-1955          4.3.    Military Interventions, Exclusionary Governing Alliances,   and Regressive Social Policy Reform, 1955-1973                      4.4.    Social Policy Expansion and Political Conflict   during the Second Peronism, 1973-1976                          4.5.    The Retrenchment of Social Policy under a  Neoliberal Dictatorship, 1976-1983                              4.6.    Return to Democracy, Stagflation, and the Failed Attempt of Inclusionary Social Policy, 1983-1989                          4.7.    Neoliberalism and Regressive Social Policy Reform, 1989-2001              4.8.    Crisis, Paradigm Change and the Expansion of Social Protections for Low-Income Earners, 2002-2015  4.9.    Outlook: The Formation of a New Regressive Governing Alliance and the Return of Retrenchment after 2015                          5.    ANALYSING THE STRUCTURAL BASES, ACTORS AND POLITICAL MECHANISMS OF CHANGE                      5.1.    Social Policy towards Low-Income Earners during Different Periods: Between Truncated and Inclusionary Social Protection                  5.2.    Constellations of Actors and Interests in the Argentine Politics of Social Protection for Low-Income Earners                      5.3.    The Distribution of Power Resources and Social Protection for Low-Income Earners                      5.4.    Governing Alliances and Social Protection for Low-Income Earners          6.    CONCLUSIONS

Sommario/riassunto

Lateinamerika gilt als der ungleichste Kontinent der Welt. Paradoxerweise hat die Entwicklung ressourcenintensiver Sozialsysteme wenig dazu beigetragen, das soziale Ungleichgewicht zu verändern. Der Autor zeichnet dieses Paradox am Beispiel Argentiniens nach, deckt die zugrundeliegenden Macht- und Interessenskonflikte auf und stellt erfolgreiche Strategien zur Umsetzung einer integrativen Politik vor. Als erste Studie dieser Art untersucht sie systematisch die langfristige Entwicklung der sozialen Absicherung von Geringverdienern in Argentinien und analysiert die entscheidenden politischen, sozialen und ökonomischen Einflussfaktoren.   Latin America is considered the most unequal continent in the world. Paradoxically, the development of resource-intensive social systems has done little to change the social imbalance. The author traces this paradox using Argentina as an example, uncovering the underlying conflicts of power and interests, and identifying successful strategies for implementing inclusive policies. As the first study of its kind, it systematically examines the long-term development of social security for low-income earners in Argentina and analyzes the decisive political, social, and economic factors influencing it.