Administrative Burden Symposium: Introduction – Are we ‘administering inequality’ through our welfare systems?

Author(s):  
Gemma Carey ◽  
Donald Moynihan ◽  
Kay Cook ◽  
Eleanor Malbon
2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terri S. Thompson ◽  
Kathleen Snyder ◽  
Karin Malm ◽  
Carolyn O'Brien

Author(s):  
Kristin S. Seefeldt ◽  
Jacob Leos-Urbel ◽  
Patricia McMahon ◽  
Kathleen Snyder

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn Tout ◽  
Karin Martinson ◽  
Robin Koralek ◽  
Jennifer Ehrle

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Christensen ◽  
Lene Aarøe ◽  
Martin Bækgaard ◽  
Pamela Herd ◽  
Donald P. Moynihan

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Alan Granadino ◽  
Eirini Karamouzi ◽  
Rinna Kullaa

Writing and researching Southern Europe as a symbiotic area has always presented a challenging task. Historians and political scientists such as Stanley Payne, Edward Malefakis, Giulio Sapelli, and Roberto Aliboni have studied the concept of Southern Europe and its difficult paths to modernity. They have been joined by sociologists and anthropologists who have debated the existence of a Southern European paradigm in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the arduous transformation of the region's welfare systems, economic development, education and family structures. These scholarly attempts to understand the specificities of Southern Europe date back to the concerns of Western European Cold War strategists in the 1970s, many of whom were worried about the status quo of the region in the aftermath of the fall of the dictatorships. But this geographical and geopolitical definition of the area did not necessarily follow existing cultural, political and economic patterns. Once the Eurozone crisis hit in the 2000s these questions came back with renewed force but with even less conceptual clarity, as journalists and pundits frequently gestured towards vague notions of what they considered to be ‘Southern Europe’.


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