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Subsidiarity and social citizenship: Social assistance schemes in Austria,Belgium, Switzerland and Norway
Authors:Bettina Leibetseder  Erika Gubrium  Danielle Dierckx  Robert Fluder  Roland Hauri  Peter Raeymaeckers
Institution:1. Department of Politics and Social Policy, Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria;2. Department of Social Work, Child Welfare and Social Policy, Oslo and Akershus University College, Oslo, Norway;3. Policy Research Center on Poverty and Social Exclusion, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium;4. Department of Social Work, Berner Fachhochschule, Bern, Switzerland;5. Division of Assessment and Intermediation, Intact Foundation, Burgdorf, Switzerland;6. Department of Sociology, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium
Abstract:Previous research has emphasised that conditionality impinges on social citizenship. However, a systematic assessment examining the impact of functional and territorial subsidiarity has been overlooked. Developing seven operational criteria – rights, means testing, conditionality, voice and choice, discretion, benefit's adequacy and supplementary system – we determined levels of subsidiarity and social citizenship in social assistance schemes. Analysing the benefit reform trajectories of Austria, Belgium, Norway and Switzerland, we conclude that social assistance schemes have not improved. Low benefits, means testing and work linkage have strengthened functional subsidiarity, whereas questions of voice and choice are rarely on the agenda. Caseworkers’ discretion and local administration have sustained territorial subsidiarity. Therefore, considering the potential role that benefits could play in the welfare state, low up‐take minimises the redistributive potential and, in general, risk has substantially shifted towards social assistance.
Keywords:social assistance  subsidiarity  social citizenship  Austria  Belgium  Switzerland  Norway
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