Social Justice and the German Labour Market: A Critical Inquiry into Normative Institutional Analysis
By (Author) Douglas Voigt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
11th October 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
331.120420943
Hardback
248
Width 159mm, Height 229mm, Spine 20mm
522g
The neoliberal transformation of welfare state institutions has intensified social inequalities, raising questions of social justice across European varieties of capitalism. In Germany, this transformation occurred with Third Way social democracy and the consequent Hartz reforms. After ten years of reducing unemployment, this 'Hartz Regime' is now cited as a model for reforming other European political economies. Despite this apparent success, it has also received criticism for exacerbating the social injustices of neoliberal capitalism, ultimately leading to the question: how do we know if the German Hartz Regime is socially just Drawing on the Frankfurt School of critical theory, this study demonstrates not only how to develop a theory of social justice for empirically studying labour market institutions, but also illustrates it through an extensive study of the German case. The result is both unsurprising and reinforces classical social democratic concerns: not only the Hartz Regime, but capitalism itself, is inherently unjust. By accepting this previously recognised conclusion, the book provides a critical framework for the normative evaluation of empirical institutions, effective for studying the varieties of social (in)justice in contemporary capitalism beyond Germany.
Ambitious conceptually, innovative methodologically, and compelling empirically, Douglas Voigt's book is a must-read for anybody interested in the normative commitments inherent to both welfare/workfare regimes and welfare/workfare scholarship. Voigt delivers a convincing critique of the social investment paradigm in scholarly and 'real world' terms, forcing us to think anew about what we mean by 'social justice' and why that matters. -- Ian Bruff, Lecturer in European Politics, University of Manchester
Douglas Voigt is currently an affiliated postdoctoral researcher at Kings College London and an Associate Fellow at the Post-Growth Societies College at Friedrich-Schiller University of Jena, Germany.