Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T16:22:16.949Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Welfare State as Transnational Event: Evidence from Sequences of Policy Adoption

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Extract

Students of the welfare state have long speculated about the sequence in which welfare programs were adopted. Worker’s compensation, for example, has generally been adopted early by the various countries, while family allowances have come later. The order of these programs is important both for its inherent interest and for its bearing on theories of the welfare state.

Type
Politics
Copyright
Copyright © Social Science History Association 1992 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbott, A. (1984) “Event sequence and event duration.Historical Methods 17: 192204.Google Scholar
Abbott, A. (1990a) “A primer on sequence methods.Organizational Science 1: 373-92.Google Scholar
Abbott, A. (1990b) “Conceptions of time and events in social science methods.Historical Methods 23: 140-50.Google Scholar
Abbott, A., and Forrest, J. (1986) “Optimal matching methods for historical se quences.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 16(3): 471-94.Google Scholar
Abbott, A., and Hrycak, A. (1990) “Measuring resemblance in sequence data.” American Journal of Sociology 96:144-85.Google Scholar
Amenta, E., and Carruthers, B. G. (1988) “The formative years of U.S. social spending policies.American Sociological Review 53: 661–78.Google Scholar
Banks, Arthur S. (1981) “An index of socio-economic development: 1869-1975.Journal of Politics 43: 390411.Google Scholar
Boli-Bennett, J., and Meyer, J. W. (1978) “The ideology of childhood and the state.American Sociological Review 43: 797812.Google Scholar
Collier, D., and Messick, R. (1975) “Prerequisites versus diffusion.American Political Science Review 69: 12991315.Google Scholar
Cutright, P. (1965) “Political structure, economic development, and national social security programs.American Journal of Sociology 70: 537-50.Google Scholar
DeViney, S. (1983) “Characteristics of the state and the expansion of public social expenditures.Comparative Social Research 6: 151-74.Google Scholar
Doolittle, R. F. (1990) Methods in Enzymology. San Diego: Academic.Google Scholar
Flora, P., and Alber, J. (1981) “Modernization, democratization, and the development of welfare states in Western Europe,” in Flora, P. and Heidenheimer, A. (eds.) The Development of Welfare States in Europe and America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books: 3780.Google Scholar
Forrest, J., and Abbott, A. (1990) “The optimal matching method for anthropological data: An introduction and reliability analysis.Journal of Quantitative Anthropology 2: 151-70.Google Scholar
Hannan, M., and Carroll, G. (1981) “Dynamics of formal political structure.” American Sociological Review 46:1935.Google Scholar
Heidenheimer, A.J. (1981) “Education and Social Security entitlements in Europe and America,” in Flora, P. and Heidenheimer, A. (eds.) The Development of Welfare States in Europe and America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction: 269304.Google Scholar
Hicks, A., and Swank, D. (1984) “On the political economy of welfare expansion.Comparative Political Studies 17: 81119.Google Scholar
Hubert, L.J., and Golledge, R.G. (1982) “Comparing rectangular data matrices.Environment and Planning A 14: 1087-95.Google Scholar
Hubert, L.J. and Costanzo, C. M. (1981) “Generalized procedures for evaluating spatial autocorrelation.Geographical Analysis 13: 224-33.Google Scholar
Kruskal, J.B., and Wish, M. (1983) Multidimensional Scaling. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Lange, P., and Garrett, G. (1983) “Organizational and political determinants of economic performance, 1974-1980.” Paper presented at the Fourth Annual Conference of Europeanists, Washington, DC, October.Google Scholar
League of Nations (1929) International Statistical Yearbook. Geneva: League of Nations.Google Scholar
Mackie, T. T., and Rose, R. (1983) The International Almanac of Electoral History. 2d ed., New York: Facts on File.Google Scholar
Mitchell, B.R. (1978) European Historical Statistics. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Miura, R. M. (1986) Some Mathematical Questions in Biology: DNA Sequence Analysis. Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences, no. 17. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society.Google Scholar
Myles, J. (1983) Old Age in the Welfare State. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Orloff, A.S., and Skocpol, T. (1984) “Why not equal protection?American Sociological Review 49: 726-50.Google Scholar
Pampel, F.C., and Williamson, J. B. (1985) “Age structure, politics, and cross-national patterns of public pension expenditures.American Sociological Review 50: 782-99.Google Scholar
Pampel, F.C., and Williamson, J. B. (1988) “Welfare spending in advanced industrial democracies.” Ameri can Journal of Sociology 93: 1424-56.Google Scholar
Pampel, F.C., and Williamson, J. B. (1989) Age, Class, Politics, and the Welfare State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pavalko, E. K. (1989) “State timing of policy adoption.American Journal of Sociology 95: 592615.Google Scholar
Ramirez, F.O., and Boli, J. (1987) “The political construction of mass schooling.Sociology of Education 60: 217.Google Scholar
Sankoff, D., and Kruskal, J.B. (1983) Time Warps, String Edits, and Macro-molecules. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.Google Scholar
Schmitter, P.C., and Lehmbruch, G. (1982) Patterns of Corporatist Policy-making. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Schneider, S.K. (1982) “The sequential development of social programs in eighteen welfare states.Comparative Social Research 5: 195200.Google Scholar
Shalev, M. (1983) “The social democratic model and beyond.Comparative Social Research 6: 315-51.Google Scholar
Shotwell, J. T. (1934) The Origins of the International Labour Office. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Skocpol, T., and Amenta, E. (1986) “States and social policies.” Annual Review of Sociology 12: 131-57.Google Scholar
Stryker, R. (1990) “Science, class, and the welfare state.American Journal of Sociology 96: 684726.Google Scholar
Taylor, C. L., and Jodice, D. A. (1983) World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators. 3d ed., New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Thomas, G. M., and Lauderdale, P. (1987) “World polity sources of national welfare and land reform,” in Thomas, G. M., Meyer, J. W., Ramirez, F. O., and Boli, J. (eds.) Institutional Structure. Newbury Park, CA: Sage: 198214.Google Scholar
Thomas, G. M., Meyer, J. W., Ramirez, F. O., and Boli, J., eds. (1987) Institutional Structure. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Labor (1965) Directory of Labor Organizations. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
U.S. Social Security Administration (1982) Social Security Programs throughout the World, 1981. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Watkins, S.C. (1987) “The fertility transition.Sociological Forum 2: 645-73.Google Scholar
Wilensky, H. (1975) The Welfare State and Equality. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
World Almanac (1988).Google Scholar