Название | Social Policy |
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Автор произведения | Fiona Williams |
Жанр | Экономика |
Серия | |
Издательство | Экономика |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781509540402 |
At the same time, these are often contradictory, uneven and contested domains, as are the social policies that shape and are shaped by them. Welfare governance in this way can be understood as an ongoing attempt to ‘settle’ the changing and challenging conditions of family, nation and work. Welfare settlements often reinscribe lines of inclusion, exclusion and marginalization, and these can create fault lines which surface later. For example, as described earlier, the post-war welfare state represented an important set of social policies that served to protect people’s welfare and wellbeing from cradle to grave. However, it did so within a context of colonialism and a conception of citizenship in which women in general and men and women migrants from the former colonies were constructed as second-class citizens and excluded from access, directly or indirectly, to many benefits and services. By the 1960s and 1970s, social movements began to challenge these exclusions. The New Right under Margaret Thatcher serves as a second example. The New Right’s settlement attempt combined welfare neoliberalism with a social conservatism which linked traditional ideas of the male breadwinner family and a nation of empire to the need for a strong state, less state intervention, and a concerted attack on those who threatened family, nation or work. These threats were embodied in lone mothers, those who defended or practised same-gender relationships, BAME youth, the trade unions and striking miners. This was an intense struggle by the New Right to settle the dislocations and contradictions of deindustrializing post-Fordist conditions of work and the post-traditionalist and postcolonial hierarchies of family and nation. In the end it was not only their economic policies but the mismatch of their attempt to resettle the social by moving backwards in time, compared with the reality of, in particular, new family forms, a multicultural society and working mothers, that contributed to their defeat in 1997 by New Labour, who promised ‘modernization’ of the economic, the social and the organizational.
The application of the family–nation–work framework has changed over time. At a simple level, it’s an aide-mémoire of aspects and dynamics to keep in mind in any social policy analysis that seeks a more complex understanding of contemporary social relations. In this way it also provides the conceptual means to critique social policy ideas and approaches using an intersectional analysis. More broadly it offers a way of capturing the multifaceted and intersecting social dimensions of change and contestation in welfare states at the national or sub-/supranational scale, which are also understood as articulating with global social and economic conditions. These conditions in the twenty-first century, I have suggested, are represented by four intersecting crises. Thus family–nation–work loosely reiterates the crises of care, racialized borders and financialized capitalism. However, it is also necessary to register the crisis of climate change and the environment within the family–nation–work framework in order to take up the serious critiques that have developed within the discipline of social policy in this century. These argue for a radical rethinking of future social policy in terms of the urgent priorities of ecological degradation and climate change. In addition, they introduce a new set of interdependencies and relations of power between human and the non-human and living world. Two of the most developed attempts to rethink this from the perspective of social policy come from Tony Fitzpatrick and Ian Gough, who develop proposals for eco-social policy (or eco-welfare) that bring measures to reduce the risks of climate change and enhance sustainability into alignment with social policy (Fitzpatrick 2011, 2014; Gough 2017; see also Fitzpatrick and Cahill 2002; Snell and Haq 2014, O’Neill et al. 2018). Here I summarize the main arguments for such an alignment.
First is a need to recognize the interdependence between social policies aiming to meet basic needs and reduce inequalities and the achievement of sustainability. The forms of globalized capital accumulation, the constant goal of economic growth, the rise in inequalities and the decline in social welfare infrastructure need to be tackled together. This means understanding the way in which environmental justice is linked to social and economic justice, including intergenerational justice. As the previous section outlined, it is those in the most disadvantaged socio-economic groups and regions of the world, especially women, who are at greatest risk from the effects of climate change (Robinson 2018). Within developed nations, climatic events, air pollution, toxic emissions, fuel poverty, food insecurity, transport costs and an insecure, deregulated housing market affect the welfare of the poorest communities, particularly where degradation of the planet meets racial injustice (Anthony 2017). Each of these encompasses issues to do with environmental policies.
Second is the question as to how sustainability, adaptation and mitigation policies can be developed and implemented in ways that are socially just and equitable. For example, a carbon tax would be regressive on poorer individuals, especially those who have less access to resources to decarbonize their cars or houses. A food or fuel policy that depended on individual household responsibility for reorganization could fall disproportionately on poorer women.
Third, this means addressing how social protection, employment, health, education, social care and wellbeing can be developed in a sustainable manner. For example, at a practical level, how far do employment policies generate sustainable jobs, and how far are houses, schools and hospital buildings run on eco-friendly technology? More broadly, the economic model of developed welfare states has been dependent in part on tax revenues that in turn depend on a growth economy and, with it, the prioritization of productivism, the ethic of paid work and a consumptionbased society. Social insurance is a system of dealing with individual and calculable risk, but the effects of climate change (and pandemics) are both unpredictable and can affect large populations and countries. This requires a different approach to security and protection that is geared towards long-term collective solutions and international governance and solidarity. It presupposes the importance of global governance, but also, since many policies to deal with the sources of planetary instability imply changes in everyday practices, forms of participatory democracy at local community level (see chapter 7).
In this short description it becomes clear that the dynamics of family–nation–work and welfare are integral to environmental inequalities and to the determination of future eco-social policy. The framework is therefore extended to family, nation, work and nature (see appendix I). In this way nature signifies the conditions, social relations, changes and challenges of the human and non-human eco-system. The meanings and discourses, policies and practices attached to this domain, as with family, nation and work, shift over time and place.4 This part of the framework is relatively formative at this stage, reflecting the early integration of social and environmental policies in practice. It seeks to inform the book’s orientation, analysis and praxis in order to recognize the argument for integrating social with environmental policy. It does this (i) by developing the intersections of the ecological crisis with other global crises; (ii) by illustrating, where salient, the ways in which environmental injustice intersects with the complexities of welfare-related social inequalities, most notably in an analysis of the Covid-19 pandemic; (iii) by applying an intersectional approach to understanding collective action by environmentalists and others with a view to possibilities for alliances; and (iv) by examining synergies and tensions in the political ethics of care, environmentalism and decoloniality and in their and others’ prefigurative programmes for transforming the welfare state into an eco-welfare commons.
Conclusion
This chapter has set out a framework for analysing social policy in the twenty-first century that, first of all, centralizes four key global crises which endanger future sustainability, solidarity and wellbeing and serve to reinforce historical and contemporary gender, racial, class and geo-political inequalities, precarities and dehumanizations. The framing extends from the