Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Uneasy Promise of the Welfare State, by Alice
Kessler-Harris
1. Historians Interpret the Welfare State, 1975–1995, by Maurizio
Vaudagna
Part I. Democracy and the Welfare State in Europe and the United
States
2. Reconciling European Integration and the National Welfare State:
A Neo-Weberian Perspective, by Maurizio Ferrera
3. Democracy After the Welfare State: An Interview, by Ira
Katznelson
Part II. Varieties of Retrenchment
4. Privatization and Self-Responsibility: Patterns of Welfare-State
Development in Europe and the United States Since the 1990s, by
Christian Lammert
5. Paradise Lost? Social Citizenship in Norway and Sweden, by Gro
Hagemann
6. Social Citizenship in the U.S. Affordable Care Act, by Beatrix
Hoffman
7. In the Shadow of Employment Precarity: Informal Protection and
Risk Transfers in Low-End Temporary Staffing, by Sébastien
Chauvin
8. From the Welfare State to the Carceral State: Whither Social
Reproduction?, by Mimi Abramovitz
Part III. Gender, the Family, and Social Provision
9. Family Matters: Social Policy, an Overlooked Constraint on the
Development of European Citizenship, by Chiara Saraceno
10. Transforming Gendered Labor Policies in Sweden and the United
States, 1960s–2000s, by Ann Shola Orloff
11. Breadwinner Liberalism and Its Discontents in the American
Welfare State, by Robert O. Self
Part IV. Possibilities of Resistance
12. Nationalism’s Challenge to European Citizenship, Democracy, and
Equality: Potential for Resistance from Transnational Civil
Society, by Birte Siim
13. Poor-People Power: The State, Social Provision, and American
Experiments in Democratic Engagement, by Marisa Chappell
14. Grassroots Challenges to Capitalism: An Interview, by Frances
Fox Piven
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Alice Kessler-Harris is R. Gordon Hoxie Professor of American History, emerita, and a professor in the Institute for Research on Women and Gender at Columbia University. Her books include Out to Work: A History of Wage-Earning Women in the United States (1982); In Pursuit of Equity: Women, Men, and the Quest for Economic Citizenship in Twentieth Century America (2001); A Woman's Wage (2014); and A Difficult Woman: The Challenging Life and Times of Lillian Hellman (2012). Maurizio Vaudagna is professor of contemporary history, emeritus, at the University of Eastern Piedmont. He is the author or editor of several books, including The American Century in Europe (2003) and The New Deal and the American Welfare State: Essays from a Transatlantic Perspective (2014). With Alice Kessler-Harris, he is the editor of Democracy and Social Rights in the "Two Wests" (2009).
Linking questions of democracy to those of social provision through the generative concept of the "Two Wests," Kessler-Harris, Vaudagna, and their contributors offer a primer on the crisis of the welfare state, the grip of austerity politics, and the rise of right-wing nationalism that mark our times. An important contribution! -- Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara
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