000 01332pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aSchmidt, Vivien A.
245 _aDoes discourse matter in the politics of welfare state adjustment?
260 _c2002
300 _ap.168-93.
362 _aMar
520 _aIn the reform of the welfare state, countries' experiences depend not only on their economics, institutions, and policy responses but also on politics, that is, on governments' ability to gain agreement for reform through discourse, understood as both a set of ideas and an interactive process. This article seeks to show not only how discourse matters but also when it matters, that is, when it acts as a causal influence on welfare reform, altering perceptions of interests and over-coming institutional obstacles to change. It demonstrates this through the examination of three matched sets of cases in which the presence of a coherent discourse contributed to the success of welfare state reform and its absence contributed to the success of welfare state reform and its absence contributed to its failure. The matched pairs are Britain and New Zealand, the Netherlands and Germany, and Italy and France. - Reproduced.
650 _aSocial policy
773 _aComparative Political Studies
909 _a52356
999 _c52356
_d52356