Abstract: | ![]() Prevention continues to gain importance among the strategies open for governmental development of social policy. This paper offers two exploratory conceptual discussions related to prevention in social policy. The first is a representation of the policy making environment with special reference to the informational requirements for the development of policy. The second is a discussion of social pathologies, broadly defined as patterns of behavior with important negative repercussions on individuals whom we refer to as victims, and of possible strategies toward the development of (at least partial) preventive measures. The two discussions are interrelated as the shape of the second is dictated by the desiderata outlined in the first. The paper is divided into five parts: - Introduction: the conundrum of prevention.
- The Development of a paradigm of the policy context.
- Dependent variables: social pathologies.
- Independent variables: a focus on structural determinants.
- Conclusion: information requirements for preventive action.
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