1,442
Views
7
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Investing over the life course: The role of lifelong learning in a social investment strategy1

&

References

  • Amable, B., 2003. The Diversity of Modern Capitalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Amable, B., 2016. Institutional complementarities in the dynamic comparative analysis of capitalism. Journal of Institutional Economics, 12 (01), 79–103.
  • Aoki, M., 1994. The contingent governance of teams: analysis of institutional complementarity. International Economic Review, 35 (3), 657–676.
  • Aspin, D.N., et al., eds., 2012. Second International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer.
  • Bagnall, R.G., 1990. Lifelong Education: the institutionalisation of an illiberal and regressive ideology? Educational Philosophy and Theory, 22 (1), 1–7.
  • Bagnall, R. G., et al., 2012. Transformation or accommodation? a re-assessment of lifelong learning. In: D.N. Aspin eds. Second International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer, 899–914.
  • Barbier, J. C., 2017. ‘Social investment’: with or againsty social inclusion? In: A. Hemerijck, ed. Social investment uses, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 51–58.
  • Beck, U., 2000. What is globalization? In: D. Held and A. McGrew, eds. The Global Transformations Reader. An Introduction to the Globalization Debate. Cambridge: Polity Press, 99–103.
  • Béland, D., 2009. Ideas, institutions, and policy change. Journal of European Public Policy, 16 (5), 701–718.
  • Biesta, G., and Tedder, M., 2007. Agency and learning in the lifecourse: towards an ecological perspective. Studies in the Education of Adults, 39 (2), 132–149.
  • Biesta, G., and Leary, T., 2012. Have lifelong learning and emancipation still something to say to each other? Studies in the Education of Adults, 44 (1), 5–20.
  • Blossfeld, H.P., Kilpi, E., Vono de Vilhena, D. and Buchholz, S., eds., 2014. Adult learning in modern societies: An international comparison from a life-course perspective. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
  • Bonoli, G., 2007. Time matters postindustrialization, new social risks, and welfare state adaptation in advanced industrial democracies. Comparative Political Studies, 40 (5), 495–520.
  • Bonoli, G., Cantillon, B., and Van Lancker, W., 2017. Social investment and the Matthew effect: limits to a strategy. In: A. Hemerijck, ed. Social investment uses, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 66–76.
  • Boyer, R., 2007. Capitalism strikes back: why and what consequences for social sciences? Revue de la Régulation. Capitalisme, Institutions, Pouvoirs, (1) :10.4000/regulation.2142
  • Breen, R., 1997. Risk, recommodification and the future of the service class. Sociology, 31 (3), 473–489.
  • Busemeyer, M. R., and Nikolai, R., 2010. Education. In: F. G. Castles, S. Leibfried, J. Lewis, H. Obinger and C. Pierson, eds. The Oxford Handbook of the Welfare State. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 494–510.
  • Busemeyer, M. R., and Trampusch, C., 2012. The political economy of collective skill formation. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Cantillon, B., and Vandenbroucke, F., eds., 2014. Reconciling work and poverty reduction: how successful are European welfare states? Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Casey, C., et al., 2012. Lifelong learning: innovation, policy and institutions. In: D.N. Aspin eds. Second International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer, 321–335.
  • Cefalo, R., 2018. Il welfare del futuro. In: Y. Kazepov and D. Carbone, eds. Che cos’è il welfare state. Roma: Carocci, 125–146.
  • Checchi, D., et al., 2014. The policy response to educational inequalities. In: B. Nolan., et al., eds. Changing Inequalities in Rich Countries: Analytical and Comparative Perspectives. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 294–327.
  • European Commission., 2000. Presidency Conclusions. Lisbon European Council, 23 and 24 March 2000, Brussels.
  • Crouch, C., 1999. Social change in western Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Crouch, C., et al., 2005. Dialogue on institutional complementarity and political economy. Socio-Economic Review, 3 (2), 359–382.
  • Dräbing, V., and Nelson, M., 2017. Addressing human capital risks and the role of institutional complementarities. In: A. Hemerijck, ed. Social investment uses. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 128–139.
  • Ertl, H., 2006. European Union policies in education and training: the Lisbon agenda as a turning point? Comparative Education, 42 (1), 5–27.
  • Esping-Andersen, G., 1990. The three worlds of welfare capitalism. Cambridge: Blackwell.
  • Esping-Andersen, G., et al., 2002. Why we need a new welfare state. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • European Commission, 2013. Towards Social Investment for Growth and Cohesion – Including Implementing the European Social Fund 2014-2020, COM (2013) 83 final.
  • Ferrera, M., 2013. Neowelfarismo liberale: nuove prospettive per lo stato sociale in Europa. Stato e Mercato, 33 (1), 3–36.
  • Ferrera, M., 2016. Rotta di collisione: euro contro welfare? Roma-Bari: Laterza.
  • Gagliardi, F., 2014. A bibliometric analysis of the literature on institutional complementarities. Paper presented at the Inaugural WINIR Conference, Old RoyalNaval College, Greenwich, London, UK, 11–14 September 2014.
  • Giddens, A., 1994. Living in a post-traditional society. In: U. Beck, A. Giddens and S. Lash, eds. Reflexive Modernization. Cambridge: Polity Press, 56–109.
  • Giddens, A., 1998. The third way: The renewal of social democracy. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Green, A., 2006. Models of lifelong learning and the ‘knowledge society. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 36 (3), 307–325.
  • Hall, P. A. and Soskice, D., eds., 2001. Varieties of capitalism: The institutional foundations of comparative advantage. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Hemerijck, A., 2013. Changing Welfare States. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Hemerijck, A., 2017. Social investment uses. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Hemerijck, A., et al., 2016. Assessing Social Investment Synergies (ASIS). Brussels: European Commission.
  • Hemerijck, A., and Manow, P., 2001. The experience of negotiated reforms in the Dutch and German welfare states. In: B. Ebbinghaus and P. Manow, eds. Comparing welfare capitalism: Social policy and political economy in Europe, Japan and the USA. London: Routledge, 217–242.
  • Jenson, J., 2010. Diffusing ideas for after-neoliberalism: the social investment perspective in Europe and Latin America. Global Social Policy: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Public Policy and Social Development, 10 (1), 59–84.
  • Jessop, B., 1993. Towards a schumpeterian workfare state? preliminary remarks on post-fordist political economy. Studies in Political Economy, 40 (1), 7–39.
  • Kazepov, Y., ed., 2009. La dimensione territoriale delle politiche sociali in Italia. Roma: Carocci.
  • Kazepov, Y., and Ranci, C., 2017. Is every country fit for social investment? Italy as an adverse case. Journal of European Social Policy, 27 (1),90–104.
  • Kazepov, Y., and Ranci, C., 2018. Making Social Investment work: a comparative analysis of the socio-economic preconditions of social investment policies. Paper presented at the Annual SISEC Conference, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano, IT, 25–27 January 2018.
  • Livingstone, D. W., et al., 2012. Lifelong learning and life-wide work in precarious times. reversing policy-making optics. In: D.N. Aspin ed. Second International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer, 269–286.
  • Lundvall, B., and Lorenz, E., 2012. Social investment in the globalising learning economy - A European perspective. In: N. Morel, B. Palier and J. Palme, eds. Towards a social investment welfare state. Bristol: Policy Press, 235–260.
  • Morel, N., Palier, B., and Palme, J., eds., 2012a. Towards a Social Investment Welfare State? Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Morel, N., Palier, B., and Palme, J., eds., 2012b. Social investment: a paradigm in search of a new economic model and political mobilisation. In: N. Morel, B. Palier and J. Palme, eds. Towards a Social Investment Welfare State? Bristol: Policy Press, 353–376.
  • Nolan, B., 2013. What use is social investment? Journal of European Social Policy, 23 (5), 459–468.
  • Nolan, B., ed., 2014. Changing inequalities and societal impacts in rich countries: Thirty countries' experiences (First edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • OECD 1997. The OECD Jobs strategy. Making work pay. Taxation, benefits, employment and unemployment. Paris: OECD.
  • Pierson, P., 2002. Coping with permanent austerity: welfare state restructuring in affluent democracies. Revue Française de Sociologie, 43 (2), 369–406.
  • Ranci, C., ed., 2010. Social Vulnerability in Europe: The New Configuration of Social Risks. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Ribolits, E., 2006. Humanressource – Humankapital. In: A. Dzierzbicka and A. Schirlbauer, eds. Pädagogisches Glossar der Gegenwart. Von Autonomie bis Wissensmanagement. Wien: Löcker, 135–145.
  • Riddell, S., Markowitsch, J. and Weedon, E., eds., 2012. Lifelong Learning in Europe: Equity and Efficiency in the Balance. Bristol: Policy Press.
  • Riddell, S., and Weedon, E., 2012. Lifelong learning and the generation of human and social capital. In: S. Riddell, J. Markowitsch and E. Weedon, eds. Lifelong Learning in Europe: Equity and Efficiency in the Balance. Bristol: Policy Press, 1–17.
  • Rizvi, F., 2007. Lifelong learning: beyond neo-liberal imaginary. In D.N. Aspin, ed. Philosophical perspectives on lifelong learning. London: Springer, 114–130.
  • Roberts, K., 2009. Opportunity structures then and now. Journal of Education and Work, 22 (5), 355–368.
  • Sabato, S., 2016. Set aside, embedded or relaunched? The uncertain fate of the EU social investment strategy. Social Policies, 3 (2), 371–386.
  • Saraceno, C., 2013. Trasformazioni dei welfare state e/o spostamenti discorsivi. Un commento Stato e Mercato, 33 (1), 67–80.
  • Scott, W. R., 2013. Institutions and organizations: Ideas, interests, and identities. London: Sage.
  • Sergi, V., Cefalo, R., and Kazepov, Y., 2018. Young people’s disadvantages on the labour market in Italy: reframing the NEET category. Journal of Modern Italian Studies, 23 (1), 41–60.
  • Solga, H., 2014. Education, economic inequality and the promises of the social investment state. Socio-Economic Review, 12 (2), 269–297.
  • Streeck, W. and Thelen, K., eds., 2005. Beyond Continuity: Institutional Change in Advanced Political Economies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Streeck, W., et al., 2016. Does capitalism have a future? Socio-Economic Review, 14 (1), 163–183.
  • Taylor-Gooby, P., 2002. The silver age of the welfare state: perspectives on resilience. Journal of Social Policy, 31 (4), 597–621.
  • Taylor-Gooby, P., 2004. New risks, new welfare: The transformation of the European welfare state. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Thelen, K., 2009. Institutional change in advanced political economies. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47 (3), 471–498.
  • Vandenbroucke, F., and Vleminckx, K., 2011. Disappointing poverty trends: is the social investment state to blame? Journal of European Social Policy, 21 (5), 450–471.
  • Verbist, G., and Matsaganis, M., 2012. The redistributive capacity of services in the EU. For Better For Worse, For Richer For Poorer. Labour Market participation, social redistribution and income poverty in the EU. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Wain, K., et al., 2001. Lifelong learning: small adjustment or paradigm shift? In: D.N. Aspin eds. International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer, 183–198.
  • Walker, M., et al., 2012. Egalitarian policy formulation in lifelong learning: two models of lifelong education and social justice for young people in Europe. In: D.N. Aspin eds. Second International Handbook of Lifelong Learning. London: Springer, 181–193.
  • Walther, A., 2006. Regimes of youth transitions: choice, flexibility and security in young people’s experiences across different European contexts. Young, 14 (2), 119–139.
  • Wilensky, H. L., 1975. The Welfare State and Equality. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Wren, A., 2017. Social investment and the Service Economy Trilemma. In: A. Hemerijck, ed. Social investment uses. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 97–107.