The New Politics of Welfare: Social Justice in a Global Context (SAGE Politics Texts series)

The New Politics of Welfare: Social Justice in a Global Context (SAGE Politics Texts series)

by Bill Jordan (Author), Bill Jordan (Author)

Synopsis

This critical and highly topical introduction to the current debates and politics surrounding welfare reform in the United Kingdom and the United States explains the origins and main tenets of the Blair-Clinton orthodoxy. Central to the book is an examination of this orthodoxy's appeal to the concept of social justice. Bill Jordan demonstrates how values derived from the family and voluntary associations are in danger of running counter to the more fundamental principles of liberal democracy and the requirements of transnational economic exchange. He links the new politics of welfare to liberal and communitarian theories of citizenship and social justice, and assesses the broader prospects for European social policy in the struggle over economic and political integration. 'For more than a decade, Bill Jordan has been one of our most thoughtful and independent thinkers on the future of welfare. Anyone who wants to know more about what is happening to global welfare and why and how it should be changed should read this book' - Chris Pierson, Department of Politics, University of Nottingham

$5.26

Save:$56.91 (92%)

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 272
Edition: 1
Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd
Published: 24 Sep 1998

ISBN 10: 0761960228
ISBN 13: 9780761960225

Media Reviews
`For more than a decade, Bill Jordan has been one of our most thoughtful and independent thinkers on the future of welfare. In this new book he brings this critical intelligence to bear on the new welfare politics of the Blair-Clinton era. Equally at home in political theory or the finer details of social policy, Jordan is one of very few authors to address issues of welfare at a genuinely global level. And, as ever, he is not just a critic of this new orthodoxy but has his own critical and radical alternative to offer.

Anyone who wants to know more about what is happening to global welfare and why and how it should be changed should read this book' - Chris Pierson, Department of Politics, University of Nottingham

`A timely, thought-provoking and penetrating review of what the author perceives to be an emerging orthodoxy in social welfare. This is the New Politics of Welfare in question: strong on national renewal and moral authority, but short on class and exploitation as factors conceivably still standing in the way of social justice. This exposition stands in valuable contrast to the body of literature dedicated to the exposition of continental European/EU ideals of social welfare and social justice and, as such, will be a text no serious student of contemporary trends in social policy can afford to be without' - Catherine Jones Finer, University of Birmingham and editor, Social Policy & Administration

`This book raises the important question of how far and by what means national governments can secure social justice in the context of global economic transactions. Jordan's book should be read by all who are concerned with the challenge to welfare presented by the continuing erosion of the powers of national governments' - Preston King, Department of Politics and International Relations, Lancaster University

`Bill Jordan is a remarkable academic whose mind is at ease with economics, philosophy and political theory. Fortunately, his heart still remains with the clients he used to help as a social worker....Certainly I hope that New Labour politicians will read this latest book by one of Britain's most articulate, brave and compassionate social campaigners' - British Journal of Social Work

`This is an ambitious project, impressively carried out.' - Social Policy

`An excellent text, illustrated with vignettes that invite deeper thought over the matters they address.' - International Journal of Public-Private Partnerships

`Jordan's book makes an important contribution to informing us about this issue and encouraging us to develop a wider understanding of the international dimensions of social work and also of the effects of globalization even on local policy and practice.' - International Social Work

Author Bio
Bill Jordan is Reader in Social Studies at Exeter University and Professor in Social Policy at Huddersfield University. He has written extensively in politics and social policy, including most recently A Theory of Poverty and Social Exclusion (1996).