1. Including outsiders in Latin America; 2. Explaining social policy expansion and policy models; 3. The social policy divide in Latin America; 4. Social mobilization, electoral competition for outsiders and inclusive social policy in Brazil; 5. Social mobilization and inclusive social policy in Argentina; 6. Electoral competition for outsiders, conservative power and restrictive social policy in Mexico; 7. Electoral competition for outsiders, conservative power and restrictive social policy in Chile; 8. Social policy expansion in comparative perspective; Appendices; Bibliography; References; Index.
This book provides a novel explanation of widespread social policy expansion in Latin America beginning in the 1990s.
Candelaria Garay is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Massachusetts. She received a PhD in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley and a BA in Sociology from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
'The extension of social welfare programs to previously excluded
groups has been one of the most important public policy changes in
Latin America in recent decades. Candelaria Garay has written a
path-breaking book that explains how that change occurred and why
policy coverage continues to vary from one country to another. Most
important, she explains how the content and reach of social
policies are influenced by democratic competition and social
mobilization from below. This is an original and deeply insightful
book that makes a major contribution to the study of social policy
in the developing world.' Kenneth Roberts, Cornell University
'This path-breaking book is a must-read that will reshape the
discussion of Latin American politics and social policy more
generally. It illuminates a dramatic process of inclusion of
outsiders in the Latin American informal sector through
non-contributory policies and distinct processes of political
incorporation in the administration of these new policy tools
during the new millennium. Garay shows how these social policies
contributed to reshaping a political arena, previously defined by
the entrance of formal workers into the political system during the
postwar era. Moreover, the combined focus on redistribution and
control in the analysis of non-contributory policies targeted to
outsiders will reshape the debates of the literature on social
policy and the transformations of welfare regimes in diverse
regions of the world.' Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia
University
'This book examines the most important social policy development in
Latin America in decades: the extension of welfare states to cover
'outsiders,' or informal sector and rural workers who constitute a
majority of most Latin American workforces, and yet they have
historically been denied access to health care, pensions, and other
basic social benefits in most of the region. Now they are being
included and Garay tells us why and how this dramatic change
occurred. Theoretically rich and empirically rigorous, Social
Policy Expansion in Latin America explains why social policy
expanded more dramatically in some Latin America countries than in
others. Garay's book makes a major contribution to research on
comparative social policy in Latin America. It will be widely read,
assigned and cited.' Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
'Candelaria Garay's masterful book stands out in the expanding
scholarship on welfare states in Latin America for its empirical
depth, comparative breadth and theoretical ambition. The novel
argument is that democracy works to expand welfare policies, even
in right wing governments, but in particular ways that depend on
the dynamics of electoral contention and mobilization of social
movements. This is a model for comparative research.' Ben Ross
Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
'Social Policy Expansion is a remarkable book. Garay examines the
dramatic extension of welfare provision to the informal sector - a
compelling topic for Latin America and far beyond. Her unique,
hard-won data reveals striking contrasts among national
trajectories, yielding a novel typology of policy regimes. This
is a major contribution to comparative social science.' David
Collier, Robson Professor, University of California, Berkeley
'The book is particularly noteworthy because it contradicts the
predominant view in contemporary political science that emphasizes
patronage and clientelism as the key determinants for understanding
social policy provision in Latin America. Future scholars seeking
to understand social policies and their effects in Latin America
will have to reconcile their theories and results with the powerful
arguments advanced in this volume by having to consider how the
transition to democracy influences welfare state developments
differently depending on political context.' Lorena Barberia,
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