Politics of defamilialization: A comparison of Italy, Japan, Korea and Spain

Author (Person) ,
Series Title
Series Details Vol.26, No.4, October 2016, p327-343
Publication Date October 2016
ISSN 0958-9287
Content Type

Abstract
This article investigates the politics of ‘defamilialization of care’ in four familialist countries – Italy, Japan, Korea and Spain – during the past 15 years. By ‘defamilialization of care’, we refer to those public policies, which aim at reducing the care responsibility of the family – both for the young and the old.

We build upon the existing literature on new social risks by highlighting the role of those macro-political institutions such as electoral systems and government types in order to demonstrate that there are two very different types of politics of defamilialization: (1) election-oriented and (2) problem-oriented. We attribute different policy outcomes in the four familialist countries to their specific institutional configurations rather than to partisan government composition or different cultural orientations.

Source Link http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0958928716657276
Countries / Regions