Social Security Programs: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Perspective
By (Author) John Dixon
Edited by Robert P. Scheurell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th August 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government policies
362
Hardback
248
This volume examines current trends in social security programs around the world. An international group of contributors provide (1) historical perspectives on the development of social security programs (looking at the U.S., Japan, and South Korea); (2) national overviews of programs as adapted to specific populations (in Indonesia, the Philippines, China, Zimbabwe, Yugoslavia, and Malaysia); and (3) specific program analyses (long term care in Britain, health care in Sweden, and industrial accident benefits as developed in Brazil). The discussions highlight the need to evaluate the impact of social security programs on the general population, as well as on specific population groups. This work will be of interest to scholars and policy-makers in social welfare and public policy.
.,."a great deal can be learned from some of these essays, especially because we know so little about international social welfare arrangements, which era usually ignored in professional social work education."-Social Work
...a great deal can be learned from some of these essays, especially because we know so little about international social welfare arrangements, which era usually ignored in professional social work education.-Social Work
..."a great deal can be learned from some of these essays, especially because we know so little about international social welfare arrangements, which era usually ignored in professional social work education."-Social Work
JOHN DIXON is head of the Department of Social Sciences at Lingnan College in Hong Kong. ROBERT P. SCHEURELL is Associate Professor of Social Welfare at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.