The Struggle for Social Sustainability. Группа авторов

The Struggle for Social Sustainability - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_5fe08aef-0634-5a6a-962a-54469f817c09">2018). Moreover, the health and social crisis has further exposed many fictions, myths and lies: that free markets can deliver healthcare for all; that unpaid care work is not work; that we live in a post-racist world; that we are all in the same boat (Williams, 2021). Across every sphere, the impacts of COVID-19 are exacerbated for women and girls, the poorest and the most vulnerable in society and the developing countries (UN, 2020b; WBG, 2020). The world faces a “catastrophic moral failure” because of unequal COVID-19 vaccine policies, the Director-General of the WHO has warned. The price of this failure will be paid with lives and livelihoods in the world’s poorest countries.8

      The ‘social’ of social policy

      In this volume, then, we hold the idea of the ‘social’ in social policy up to fresh scrutiny. In so doing, we build on earlier works, along with some of our work, that has critically discussed the nature of the ‘social’ in social welfare (Clarke, 1996, 2007; Lewis et al, 2000; and Clarke writing in Chapter 2) and in social policy (Corbett and Walker, 2017; Williams, 2021; and Walker, Chapter 8, and Williams, Chapter 11 in this volume), and with the ‘active’ turn in social policy (Mahon, 2014; Deeming, 2016; Bonoli, 2018). Further insightful works have critically examined the new and emerging conceptions of the ‘social’ influencing the development of social policy, influential ideas about ‘social investment’ (Jenson, 2010a; Laruffa, 2018) and ‘inclusive growth’ (Jenson, 2015a, 2015b); also ideas about ‘social exclusion’ (Béland, 2007; Winlow and Hall, 2013), ‘social inclusion’ (Dujon et al, 2013), and the growing body of work discussing ‘social inequality’, ‘social wellbeing’ and ‘social progress’ (Wilkinson and Pickett, 2009, 2018 and Chapter 14 in this volume; Deeming, 2013 and Chapters 13 and 15), ideas about ‘social capital’ (Smith and Kulynych, 2002; Bebbington et al, 2004; McNeill, 2004; Ferragina and Arrigoni, 2017), ‘social solidarity’ (Stjernø, 2005; Barbier, 2013) and ‘social cohesion’ (Jenson, 2010b and Chapter 11 in this volume), along with conceptions of ‘social justice’ and ‘global social justice’ (Vosko, 2002; Craig, 2018 and Chapter 12 in this volume), ‘ecosocial’ perspectives (Fitzpatrick, 2001 and Chapter 6 in this volume; Koch and Fritz, 2014), ‘social innovation’ (Jenson, 2015c; Ayob et al, 2016) and ‘social entrepreneurship’ (Jenson, 2018), to name just some of the recent works critically exploring conceptions of the social of social policy.


Скачать книгу