The Dynamic Welfare State
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:7th Apr '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The Dynamic Welfare State explains the decline of the classic welfare state and documents the emergence of a third stage in the American welfare state, evident in corporations exploiting markets in healthcare, education, and financial services. Architects of the welfare state envisaged government as the provider of essential services to citizens; however, as the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 and the Affordable Care Act of 2010 show, corporations and the wealthy have become adept at using trade associations, hiring lobbyists, influencing elections, and contributing to think tanks in order to craft public policy so that it is congruent with industry preferences. Additionally, The Dynamic Welfare State describes the failure of health and human services professionals to advance the welfare of the public, graphically illustrated by the poverty trap, deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill, and "the school-to-prison pipeline." A reconfigured welfare state is essential if government social programs are to honor their public commitments for the 21st century. This requires an appreciation for the contributions of nonprofit and for-profit organizations as well as the role of capitalism in welfare philosophy. Empowerment, mobility, and innovation are themes for a dynamic welfare state that is congruent with the 21st century.
"Rising inequality not only impacts the distribution of resources in the economy, but also is fundamentally altering the way our government works to meet its most basic obligation-to support the general welfare. Through a clear and detailed accounting, Stoesz masterfully explains how our entire social policy infrastructure is being transformed by concentrated power and wealth, farming out public responsibilities to poorly conceived and poorly regulated social markets." --Reid Cramer, PhD, Director of the Asset Building Program, New America "While there are a number of books focused on welfare and social policy, I am aware of none that directly focus on the reasons for the dynamism that the author discerns in the evolution of the American welfare state, nor the role of liberal and conservative think tanks in shaping that debate or the corporate world's dependence on the new arrangements. This text is one of a kind." --Robert E. Moffit, PhD, Senior Fellow in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation "...The American road to the new 'dynamic welfare state,' evocatively portrayed by David Stoesz in this important and pioneering monograph, cannot rely on a return of the state as the core guardian of American welfare. Taking inspiration from the spirit of social pragmatism of the New Deal while offering customized assistance rather than the one-size-fits-none standardized interventions of the past, it must make the most of humanizing markets. Stoesz's authoritative, provocative, and well-researched book will most definitely trigger future-oriented policy imagination for making the U.S. variety of the dynamic welfare state work." --Anton Hemerijck, DPhil, Drs, Professor of Institutional Policy Analysis at VU University Amsterdam; Centennial Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
ISBN: 9780190251123
Dimensions: 155mm x 236mm x 31mm
Weight: 581g
304 pages