ABSTRACT

This wide-ranging and comparative text reviews the major theoretical and substantive debates on social inequality in Europe. It provides a valuable dual focus on European society and individual societies while placing Europe in its wider global context.

Demonstrating the continued importance of national difference within Europe, the author argues that nonetheless the European Social Model has softened social inequalities such as those of wealth and income distribution, social class, gender and possibly even ethnicity. However these achievements are now being undermined, partially by the European Union itself. The book also challenges conventional wisdom on Europe’s alleged need for immigration and highlights the UK’s distinctiveness within Europe, explaining the country’s uneasy relation to the European project.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Politics, European Societies, Social Policy and Comparative Studies.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|34 pages

Where is Europe anyway?

chapter 4|31 pages

Money, markets and post-modernity

chapter 5|32 pages

Employment, occupations and social classes

chapter 6|27 pages

Spatial inequality

Europe of the regions

chapter 9|27 pages

Gender equality and social inequality

chapter 10|12 pages

Conclusion

The end of the European social model before it began?