Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
Stephanie L. Mudge
Department of Sociology
University of California, Berkeley
410 Barrows Hall #1980
Berkeley, California 94720-1980
slmudge@uclink4.berkeley.edu
* Paper submitted for participation in the session on European Integration: Politics and
Economics, organized by Professor Neil Fligstein, for the August 2003 Annual Meetings of the
American Sociological Association in Atlanta, Georgia. Keywords: European Union, social
policy, education and training, welfare states, social investment.
Are Education and Training the European Union’s Welfare State?
European Social Morality and National Expenditures, 1980-2000*
Stephanie L. Mudge
University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
Europe is well known as home to some of the most historically generous and
universalistic welfare states (Esping-Andersen 1990, 1996)—the source of and sustenance for a
social morality in which welfare protections come by virtue of citizenship. Yet the European
Union’s initial forays into the world of social policy emphasize education, training, and labor
market ‘activation’ rather than the protection of European citizens through citizenship-based
benefits and transfers. The problematic considered here, then, is the European Union’s turn to a
social policy paradigm featuring the rhetorical (if not substantively identical) trappings of an
American-style social investment welfare state, and the consequences of this turn, if any, for
national policy and public expenditures. More specifically, the question this paper seeks to
address is: Did the European Union’s emergence as a stakeholder in education policy in the late
1980s and early 1990s alter the course of ongoing ‘social investment’-oriented welfare state
reforms in its member states? It offers a preliminary analysis of expenditure patterns to evaluate
the hypothesis that though the EU’s policy stance on social investment mirrors pre-existing
national responses to the welfare state ‘crisis’ of the 1980s, it is exerting its own pressure to
direct member state policies toward a ‘social investment’ welfare state model. The analysis
draws on European Union policy statements as well as nation-level data for education
expenditures drawn chiefly from the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural
Organisation (UNESCO). It sets up a framework for a follow-up analysis offering more detailed
data on categorical social expenditures, which will draw from the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) Education at a Glance and Social Expenditure
databases.
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
I. Introduction
Social theorists have long emphasized that social cohesion depends on the ability of the
state to mediate the polarizing forces of economic life. The welfare state, however, is in flux;
model of welfare state reform to address the symptoms and fears of welfare state crisis rooted in
political and economic shifts from the 1980s. A broad consensus exists that policymakers in
many countries are moving away from protection and toward education, training, and labor
market ‘activation’ (Esping-Andersen 1996; Esping-Andersen and Regini, 2000; Gilbert 2002).
In the midst of this transition, the EU emerged in the late 1980s as a new player in the
world of redistributive social policy. With the 1986 Single Market Project and the 1992 Treaty
of Maastricht, the EU gained an important foothold in expanding its jurisdiction into the core
policy areas of member states to stimulate change in jealously guarded realms of social welfare
and education policy. The EU's new expansionary justification rests on a logic rooted in human
capital theory that ties the interests of the market to a properly European jurisdiction. As others
have noted, this definition of EU jurisdiction is ambiguous and has potentially far-reaching
consequences that are as yet undefined due to the diversity of interests and motives behind
member states’ participation in the EU (Mayes et al 1992; Fligstein and Mara-Drita 1996). The
question of whether the EU’s expanding jurisdiction has played (or will play) an influential role
in national social policy, especially in the context of a larger process of crisis-induced policy
change, has no complete answer in existing research. As a preliminary effort to work toward
such an answer, this paper seeks to addresses the following question: Did the European Union’s
emergence as a stakeholder in education policy in the late 1980s and early 1990s alter the
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
2
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
course of ongoing ‘social investment’-oriented welfare state reforms in its member states? It
outlines a preliminary analysis of education expenditure patterns to evaluate the hypothesis that
though the EU’s policy stance on social investment mirrors pre-existing national responses to the
welfare state ‘crisis’ of the 1980s, it is exerting its own pressure to direct member state policies
My definition of welfare states draws heavily on Weber’s (1922) concept of the state, as
well as T.H. Marshall’s (1975) definition of social policy as the use of "political power to
supersede, supplement or modify operations of the economic system in order to achieve results
which the economic system would not achieve on its own."1 The fundamental defining element
of welfare states is their basis in socioculturally informed ideas (which I refer to hereafter as
economic system by altering the life chances of individuals and groups via redistributive policy.2
Welfare states are composed of formal rules (social policies) and informal rules (norms and
assumptions that guide the enactment of social policies) that, taken together, direct the allocation
of services, benefits, and assets within a society based on some set of membership and selection
criteria. These rules are legitimated by the authority of the state—itself rooted in a monopoly of
legitimate violence, both real and ‘symbolic’ (Bourdieu 1994), over a territory—and draw on the
resources of that state’s individual and organizational economic participants. Welfare states are
multidimensional social facts, meaning that they incorporate and express the many elements that
1
Marshall 1975, cited in Pierson and Liebfried, 1995: 3.
2
By this definition, it is worth noting that there are no states, recognized as such, that are not also welfare states.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
3
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
III. Welfare state crisis and the European Union: the social investment shift
Welfare states have been undergoing notable transitions since the 1970s, which many
analysts trace back to globalization-related economic shocks (OECD 1981; Huber and Stephens
2001; Esping-Andersen 1996). By this account, national governments unable to shelter domestic
economies from an increasingly integrated international market face increasing fiscal pressures
to scale back their welfare states (Finer 1999). By the close of the 20th Century, for instance,
Western European policymakers were confronted with a host of policy problems: a postindustrial
economy increasingly centered on services and information, a dwindling labor pool, doggedly
persistent high unemployment rates, and politically contested social welfare regimes (Esping
-
Andersen 1996, 2000; Pierson 1996).3 In addition, some argue that the structures of many
European education systems focused on imparting job-specific vocational skills are ill-suited to
respond to the variable demands of a postindustrial world (Müller and Shavit 1998).4 Gilbert
(2002) argues that, as governments respond to these developments, welfare state reforms across
Europe and in other nations of the world are increasingly leaning toward market-orientations and
privatization, targeted benefits and restricted eligibility, active labor force participation, and the
This trend toward the ‘third way,’ or what Gøsta Esping-Andersen refers to as a ‘social
investment’ type of welfare state, has extended up to become a powerful theme within the
3
See also OECD 1981; Esping-Andersen 1996; Finer 1999;
4
See also: Confederation of the EU Rector’s Conferences and the Association of European Universities (CRE). The Bologna
Declaration on the European space for higher education: an explanation. Year unspecified.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/education/socrates/erasmus/bologna.pdf.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
4
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
1996).5 In theory, the social investment model replaces universal social security benefits and
income guarantees with opportunities for human capital investment—that is, it seeks to replace
transfers that equalize distributional outcomes with education and training opportunities and
labor market policies that facilitate entry (or re-entry) into the active workforce.6
Some literature on welfare state change and social investment emphasizes the American
welfare reforms of 1996 as the strongest case of dramatic shifts in social policy (Finer 1999)7. I
contend, however, that the social investment emphasis in social policy is more noteworthyin the
case of the European Union. The United States has always endorsed a social morality that
emphasizes work and means-testing; in a sense, then, the 1996 reforms are not surprising.
Europe, on the other hand, is well known as home to historically generous and universalistic
welfare states (Esping-Andersen 1990, 1996); the social investment turn in this context implies a
more fundamental change in the social morality of the European welfare state. 8
The EU is a relatively recently formed governmental entity with limited policy space for
intervening in the longstanding social welfare policies of its member states—policies that were
historically key components of political nation-building projects, developed long before the EU
5
Ibid. See also: European Commission. (May 2000) "European Report on the Quality of School Education: Sixteen Quality
Indicators." Report based on the work of the Working Committee on Quality Indicators. Directorate-General for Education and
Culture. Italy: European Communities.
6
Esping-Andersen (1996) is careful to maintain that while these shifts appear to be occurring internationally, however,
historically and politically defined institutional differences will remain.
7
This backlash culminated in the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Opportunity to Work Act (PROWA) under President Clinton,
which legally and practically brought an end to welfare-based entitlements—a development with special consequences for poor
mothers (Orloff 1999). Instead, the new program (TANF, or Targeted Assistance for Needy Families) is based on a “work first”
idea: the optimal way to promote employment is through immediate job placement—in any job—and to gain experience and
participate in education and training while working (Strawn, Greenberg, and Savner 2001).
8
Pierson (1996) and others have also pointed out that Europe’s stronger welfare state programs fostered more entrenched
interests that tend to preserve existing social policies.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
5
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
developed its current stake in social policy (Liebfried and Pierson 1995). Nonetheless, as I
explain below, the EU is building its case for legitimate involvement in social policy; one of the
main entryways for this involvement rests on connections between education and training
(especially human capital investment) and the changing demands of the labor market.
The year 1986 marked a new era for the EU largely due to the Single Europe Act (SEA).
As several analysts have noted, the basic idea behind the SEA was around since the 1970s: to
reduce costs of trade. This idea was an important source of agreement across nations with
differing national interests and stances vis-à-vis the EU (Mayes et al 1992; Fligstein & Mara-
Drita 1996). As a consequence, the SEA passed with “little debate” (Mayes et al 1992).
Nonetheless, no substantive consensus lay behind this basic idea—as Mayes et al point out,
nations and policymakers can have a common objective and very different motives
simultaneously (Mayes et al 1992). Despite skepticism over the possibility that the SEA would
change the EU in many important ways, the unifying logic of the SEA could rally broad support
because it was both appealing enough and vague enough to create opportunities for social
conservatives and social progressives to move forward with their policy agendas (Mayes et al
1992). This opportunity set left EU policymakers in a surprising situation: a stronger, more
At this point it is unclear how this newly strengthened governmental entity will affect
social welfare in its member states, but the powerful potential of the unifying logic behind SEA
is clear—once it passed, newly empowered policymakers could carve their own paths within the
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
6
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
confines of single market logic, and shape the direction of EU and, by extension, national social
policy. But what should the focus be? The commonsense logic of human capital theory
Figure 1:
Connections of Single Market to Education and Training via the Logic of Human Capital
Theory*
Hence, beginning with the SEA, educational systems-- especially the kinds and quality of
skills they impart—came to be understood as key to the development of a skilled workforce and
an integrated European Community from the EU perspective. As the European debate over
federalism in Europe wages on, the EU is still highly constrained in its abilities to directly
intervene in any member nation's domestic affairs--with the initiation of the Single Market
Project, however, the EU developed a powerful unifying logic derived from the commonsense
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
7
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Building the EU’s role in education and training systems
One of the most important aspects of the SEA for social policy in Europe is that is paved
the way for the 1992 Treaty of Maastricht. This treaty specified education as a specific EU
policy area for the first time (Article 149). Article 149, Chapter 3 of the European Community
Treaty states that "the Community shall contribute to the development of quality education by
supplementing their actions while fully respecting the responsibility of the Member States for the
content of teaching and the organisation of educational systems and their cultural and linguistic
diversity."9 There are five major goals the Treaty specifies for Community action: (1)
developing the European dimension in education; (2) encouraging mobility of students and
education.10 These goals both reflect and reinforce education-oriented programs that had been in
place in Europe at least since the late 1980s (see Table 1, below), and especially since the 1988
among 29 European countries (including all of the EU member countries) to “reform the
9
European Commission. (May 2000). "European Report on the Quality of School Education: Sixteen Quality Indicators." Report
based on the work of the Working Committee on Quality Indicators. Directorate-General for Education and Culture. Italy:
European Communities.
10
Hingel, Anders. March 2001. "Education Policies and European Governance: Contribution to the Interservice Groups on
European Governance." European Commission, Directorate-General for Education and Culture. DG EAC/A/1: 1.
11
Confederation of the EU Rector’s Conferences and the Association of European Universities (CRE). The Bologna Declaration
on the European space for higher education: an explanation. Year unspecified.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/education/socrates/erasmus/bologna.pdf. The signatory countries are: Austria, Belgium (French and
Flemish communities), Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland,
Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Swiss Confederation, and United Kingdom.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
8
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Table 1: European Commission-Initiated Education Projects, Budgets, and Purposes, 1986-1995.
Period of Budget (ECU) Purpose
Program approval (millions)
COMETT 1986-1995 206.6 University enterprise cooperation in
technology training
ERASMUS 1987-1994 307.5 Mobility of university students and staff
and joint curriculum projects
EUROTECNET 1983-1994 7 Promote innovation in training in respect of
the new technologies
FORCE 1991-1994 31.3 Promote continuing vocational training
In the whirlwind of research on the EU, the implications of European integration for
educational change are not mainstream topics. Pierson and Liebfried (1995) point out that: "The
central components of national welfare states -- provision of education, health care, and
retirement security -- are likely to remain largely under national control."12 Yet, this immediate
control of member states does not rule out the possibility of the EU setting constraints and
creating incentive for states to decide to change their policies. Given the specific efforts of
European nations to create a more convergent “European” higher education system under the
Bologna agreement, as well as other EU initiatives that reach into all levels of education and
training across its member states, there is good reason to believe that the EU exerts just this kind
12
Pierson and Liebfried (1995). "Multitiered Institutions and The Making of Social Policy." Brookings, p33.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
9
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
By the year 2000, key EU policymakers clearly asserted a properly European prerogative
to shape and influence educational policies of member states, yet (as Field 1998 notes) these
same policymakers’ concrete efforts have focused more on quality and ‘benchmarking’ than on
actual intervention in the educational systems of member states. One European Commission
report states that in spite of the limited nature of implemented Community educational programs,
there is nonetheless a "manifest will and political demand to go beyond" from Member States
What is presently happening in co-operation in the field of education tells us, that
not only is a European Space of Education in its making, common principles of
education are being agreed upon between Member States, leading logically to a
European Model of Education. Furthermore, this momentum of deepening co-
operation in education is followed by a strong movement toward enlargement.
Thirty European countries participate presently in the action programme Socrates
and 35 European countries are actively participating in co-operation concerning
the development of quality education and training. At a yearly meeting of
Ministers of education of 35+ European countries the foundations of a European
House of education are being laid.13
The question this paper seeks to address is: Didthe European Union’s emergence as a
stakeholder in education policy in the late 1980s and early 1990s alter the course of ongoing
‘social investment’-oriented welfare state reforms in its member states? It offers a preliminary
analysis of expenditure patterns to evaluate the hypothesis that though the EU’s policy stance on
social investment mirrors pre-existing national responses to the welfare state ‘crisis’ of the
1980s, it is exerting its own pressure to direct member state policies toward a ‘social investment’
welfare state model. The analysis draws on European Union policy statements as well as nation-
13
Hingel, 2001: 2.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
10
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
level data for education expenditures drawn chiefly from the United Nations Educational,
Is there evidence of expenditure change in education systems among the member states of the
European Union in the 1980s and 1990s? UNESCO data indicates that, in fact, some change did
across EU nations (see Figure 2). Overall, the standard deviation declined from 3.4 in 1986 to
2.4 by 1996, much of which occurred between the years 1988 and 1994.
Ireland
14 Italy
12 Luxembourg
10 Netherlands
8 Portugal
6 Spain
4 Sweden
2 UK
0 Std Dev
1986 1988 1994 1995
year
Source: UNESCO 2002.
1986 figures for Portugal and Francearetaken from1983 data; 1986 figurefor theUK taken from1984 data.
14
This first-brush inquiry is intended to provide a framework for a follow-up analysis offering more detailed data on categorical
social expenditures, which will draw from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) Education at
a Glance and Social Expenditure databases.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
11
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Table 2: Education Expenditure as Percent of Public Expenditure and With some surprising
Net Differences, 1986 to 1995 (UNESCO)
1986* 1988 1994 1995 net diff exceptions, poorer
Belgium 14.3 … 10.4 5.8 -8.5
France 18.0 … 10.8 11.1 -6.9
countries increased the
Netherlands 15.6 15.7 9.4 8.7 -6.9
percentage of public
Spain 13.3 9.6 10.5 10.6 -2.7
US 16.0 12.4 14.4 14.1 -1.9 expenditures devoted to
Sweden 12.6 12.3 11.0 11.6 -1.0
Luxembourg 15.7 17.7 11.5 15.1 -0.6 education--including
UK 11.3 … 11.4 11.6 0.3
Denmark 12.7 13.1 12.5 13.1 0.4 Ireland, Portugal, Greece,
Finland 11.6 11.8 11.9 12.2 0.6
and Italy—and education
Italy 8.3 … 8.7 8.9 0.6
Greece 6.8 5.6 7.0 8.2 1.4
expenditures in wealthier
Austria 8.0 7.6 … 10.6 2.6
Portugal 8.7 … 12.1 11.7 3.0 countries (with the
Ireland 9.3 8.4 13.3 13.5 4.2
Germany … … 9.4 8.4 (-1.0) exception of Spain)
* France and Portugal - 1983 figure; UK - 1984 figure.
declined (see Table 2).
Since these figures do not account for population differences (by using per pupil education
expenditures and per capita general expenditures), however, it is unclear if this is real
convergence.
Indicators that do account for population differences suggest that trends in educational
investment are both different across European countries and across educational levels. For
primary and secondary education, expenditures from 1990 to 1996 increased for most countries,
with the striking exception of the UK. (see Figure 4 – the US is included for purposes of
comparison). There is some indication of convergence by these measures as well: the standard
deviation decreased from 8.6 to 7.8 over the six-year time period in European countries.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
12
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Figure 4: Current Expenditure per Pupil as a Percentage of GNP per Capita: Primaryand
SecondaryEducation (UNESCO)
100
90
80
70
60 1990
%
50
1996
40
30
20
10
0
United States
United Kingdom
Austria
Belgium
Luxembourg
Denmark
Italy
Netherlands
Portugal
France
Greece
Finland
Ireland
Spain
countries
For tertiary education, trends are different: not only did expenditures decline in about half of
EU countries, but variation in expenditures per pupil as a percentage of GNP per capita actually
increased from a standard deviation of 11.1 in 1990 to 13.9 by 1996 (see Figure 5).
50 1996
40
30
20
10
0
United States
United Kingdom
Austria
Belgium
Luxembourg
Denmark
Italy
Netherlands
Portugal
France
Greece
Finland
Ireland
Spain
countries
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
13
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Table 4: Current expenditure per pupil as a In sum, figures that account for population
percentage of GNP per capita, net differences 1990
to 1996 (UNESCO) differences and distinguish between levels of
ascending primary ascending tertiary
order: and order:
secondary
education show that while there may indeed
around the same time as the EU’s first forays into the realm of education policy, marked by
the 1988 Bologna Declaration and the 1992 Treaty of Maastricht. This is obviously,
however, far from conclusive evidence that EU policy statements were directly connected to
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
14
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Bibliography
Bourdieu, Pierre. (March 1994). “Rethinking the State: Genesis and Structure of the
Bureaucratic Field.” Sociological Theory 12,1: 1-18.
Cameron, David R. (1978). “The Expansion of the Public Economy.” American Political
Science Review 72, 4: 1243-1261.
Esping-Andersen, Gøsta. (1990). The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press.
____. (ed). (1996). Welfare States in Transition: National Adaptations in Global Economies.
London: Sage Publications.
Esping-Andersen, Gøsta, and Marino Regini (eds.). (2000). Why Deregulate Labor Markets?
Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
European Commission. (1993). Green Paper on European Social Policy. Bruxelles DG5.
European Commission. (May 2000) "European Report on the Quality of School Education:
Sixteen Quality Indicators." Report based on the work of the Working Committee on
Quality Indicators. Directorate-General for Education and Culture. Italy: European
Communities.
____. (January 2001). Report from the Commission: The Concrete Future Objectives of
Education Systems. Brussels.
Field, John. (1998). European Dimensions: Education, Training, and the European Union.
Higher Education Policy Series 39. London and Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley
Publishers.
Finer, Catherine Jones. (1999). “Trends and Developments in Welfare States.” In Jochen Clasen
(ed). Comparative Social Policy: Concepts, Theories, and Methods. Oxford: Blackwell
Publishers.
Fligstein (1999). "Is Globalization the Cause of the Crises of Welfare States?" (Unpublished
mss.)
Fligstein and Mara-Drita, 1996. "How to Make a Market: Reflections on the Attempt to Create a
Single Market in the European Union." AJS. 102,1.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
15
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Flora and Heidenheimer, eds (1984). The Development of Welfare States in Europe and
America. New Jersey: Transaction Publishers.
Garrett, Geoffrey. (1998). Partisan Politics in the Global Economy. New York: Cambridge
University Press.
_____. (Winter 2001). “Globalization and Government Spending Around the World.” Studies in
Comparative International Development. 35, 4: 3-29.
Garrett, Geoffrey and Deborah Mitchell. (2001). “Globalization, Government Spending and
Taxation in the OECD.” European Journal of Political Research 39, 3.
Gilbert, Neil. (2002). Transformation of the Welfare State: The Silent Surrender of Public
Responsibility. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hingel, Anders. (March 2001). Education Policies and European Governance: Contribution to
the Interservice Groups on European Governance. European Commission,
Directorate-General for Education and Culture. DG EAC/A/1: 1.
Hix, Simon. (1999). The Political System of the European Union. The European Union Series.
New York: Palgrave.
Huber, Evelyne, and John D. Stevens. (2001). Development and Crisis of the Welfare State.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Kaufman, Robert R. and Alex Segura-Ubiergo. (July 2001). “Globalization, Domestic Politics,
and Social Spending in Latin America: A Time-Series Cross-Section Analysis, 1973-
1997.” World Politics 53: 553-587.
Liebfried and Pierson (eds). (1995). European Social Policy: Between Fragmentation and
Integration. Washington, D.C.: Brookings.
Marshall, T.H. (1948). Class, Citizenship, and Social Development: Essays by TH Marshall.
New York: Doubleday.
Mayes, Hager, Knight and Streeck.(1992). Public Interest and Market Pressures: Problems
Posed by Europe 1992. New York, NY: St. Martins Press.
Mishra, R. (1993). “Social Policy in the Postmodern World.” In C. Jones (ed). New
Perspectives on the Welfare State in Europe. London: Routledge.
Müller and Shavit. (1998). “Comparative Study of Thirteen Countries.” In Shavit and Muller
(eds), From School to Work: A Comparative Study of Educational Qualifications and
Occupational Destinations. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
16
Stephanie L, Mudge
Paper prepared for ASA 2003
January 15, 2003
Orloff, Ann Shola. “Ending the Entitlement of Poor Mothers, Expanding the Claims of Poor
Employed Parents: Gender, Race, Class in Contemporary US Social Policy,” working
paper in the series: Recasting the Welfare State (1999: Robert Schuman Centre, European
University Institute).
Pierson and Liebfried. (1995). "Multitiered Institutions and The Making of Social Policy." In
Liebfried and Pierson (eds). European Social Policy: Between Fragmentation and
Integration. Washington, D.C.: Brookings.
Pierson. (January 1996). "The New Politics of the Welfare State." World Politics. 48: 143-79.
Weber, Max. [1978 (1922)]. Economy and Society. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Weir, Margaret. (ed). (1988). The Politics of Social Policy in the United States. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.
______(forthcoming). "The American Middle Class and the Politics of Education." In Zunz et
al, Postwar Social Contracts Under Stress: The Middle Classes of America, Europe,
and Japan at the Turn of the Century. Publisher?
C:\cygwininstall\home\Administrator\docs\$ASQASA_163_12192a.doc
17