ABSTRACT

Since the 1980s, neoliberals have openly contested the idea that the state should protect the socio-economic well-being of its citizens, making ‘privatization’ their mantra. Yet, as historians and social scientists have shown, welfare has always been a ‘mixed economy’, wherein private and public actors dynamically interacted, collaborating or competing with each other in the provision of welfare services. This book will be of interest to students, scholars and practitioners of welfare by developing three innovative approaches. Firstly, it illuminates the productive nature of public/private entanglements. Far from amounting to a zero-sum game, the interactions between the two sectors have changed over time what welfare encompasses, its contents and targets, often engendering the creation of new fields of intervention. Secondly, this book departs from a well-established tradition of comparison between Western nation-states by using and mixing various scales of analysis (local, national, international and global) and by covering case studies from Spain to Poland and France to Greece in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Thirdly, this book goes beyond state centrism in welfare studies by bringing back a host of public and private actors, from municipalities to international organizations, from older charities to modern NGOs.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

chapter |15 pages

Productive entanglements

The dynamics of public-private interactions in the history of social protection 1
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chapter 1|27 pages

A quintessential mixed economy?

The issue of illegitimacy as a testing ground for creative collaboration between public and private actors in French-speaking Switzerland, 1890–1960
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chapter 2|15 pages

The co-constitution of public and private actors

Building the field of social protection in German and French cities at the end of the nineteenth century
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chapter 3|21 pages

A “mixed economy of welfare” model

The complementary and mutual growth of public and private welfare in France (1970s–2000s)
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chapter 4|28 pages

Social movement and economic statistics in interwar Poland

Building an alternative expert knowledge on the condition of the working class
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chapter 5|25 pages

Performing the state?

Public and private actors in the field of social provision in twentieth-century Greece
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chapter 6|27 pages

From international aid to state policy

The cross-border trajectory of the Spanish child evacuation scheme, 1936–1939
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chapter 7|23 pages

Dividing international work on social protection of migrants

The International Labour Office and private organizations (1921–1935) 1
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