ABSTRACT

This book examines the recent evolution of the Mediterranean Welfare regime, and how the economic crisis may be contributing to redefine its basic traits. Moving from the macro comparative analysis of long-term socio-demographic trends to the study of specific welfare programs, the chapters included in this book employ a variety of methods and approaches to review the specificities of the Mediterranean Welfare model. All chapters aim to analyze the role that the recent transformations experienced by Southern European societies (ageing, increasing women labour market participation, decreasing expectations for care within the family, immigration) have had over this model. The basic characteristics of this regime type are supposed to be strongly grounded in the values shared by these societies (familistic tendencies, clientelism, lack of generalized trust), but the modernization which these countries experienced in recent years have contributed, with a different speed and to a different degree, to a significant transformation in their axiological foundations. The impact of the current fiscal and economic crisis on the Mediterranean Welfare regimes may be contributing to the growing de-legitimatisation of political systems of these countries, something particularly important in a region that established democratic regimes only (relatively) recently.

This book was originally published as a special issue of European Societies.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Where are the PIGS? Still a Southern European Welfare Regime?

chapter |21 pages

Youth, Family Change and Welfare Arrangements

Is the South still so different? 1

chapter |21 pages

The Myth of Mediterranean Familism

Family values, family structure and public preferences for state intervention in care

chapter |21 pages

Bridge Over Troubled Waters

Family, gender and welfare in Portugal in the European context

chapter |20 pages

The Southern European Migrant-Based Care Model

Long-term care and employment trajectories in Italy and Spain

chapter |18 pages

Female Employment and the Economic Crisis

Social change in Northern and Southern Italy