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Welfare State Reform Over the (Very) Long-run | major development สวัสดิการ

Welfare State Reform Over the (Very) Long-run


นอกจากการดูบทความนี้แล้ว คุณยังสามารถดูข้อมูลที่เป็นประโยชน์อื่นๆ อีกมากมายที่เราให้ไว้ที่นี่: ดูเพิ่มเติม

Speaker: Professor Paul Pierson
Respondents: Professor Anton Hemerijck, Professor Julian le Grand
Chair: Professor Howard Glennerster
This event was recorded on 9 November 2010 in Old Theatre, Old Building
The lecture and panel discussion celebrate the T H Marshall Fellowship scheme, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation, which has been running for seven years. The event also launches the Oxford Handbook of the Welfare State and will be followed by a reception. Paul Pierson has been a professor of public policy and holder of the Avice Sarint Chair of Public Policy at Berkeley since 2004. Anton Hemerijck is secretary of the Scientific Council for Government Policy in the Netherlands, and is Professor of Comparative Analysis of the European Welfare State at the Erasmus University of Rotterdam. Julian le Grand is Titmuss Professor of Social Policy at LSE. Howard Glennerster is Professor Emeritus of Social Policy at LSE.

Welfare State Reform Over the (Very) Long-run

What is the Welfare State? A Sociological Restatement


Speakers: Professor David Garland, Professor Nicola Lacey
Chair: Professor Craig Calhoun
Recorded on 10 November 2014 in Old Theatre, Old Building.
What, in fact, is the Welfare State? Commentators talk as if it were an historic moment in postwar Britain or New Deal America. Academics discuss “the death of the social” and a shift “from social state to penal state” as if it had been displaced by neoliberalism. This lecture traces the emergence of the welfare state as a specific mode of government, describing its distinctive rationality as well as its forms, functions and effects. It explains why the welfare state is now a “normal social fact” – an essential (though constantly contested) part of the social and economic organisation of advanced industrial societies.
David Garland is Professor of Sociology at NYU and Shimizu Visiting Professor at LSE Law.
Nicola Lacey is School Professor of Law, Gender and Social Policy at LSE.
Professor Craig Calhoun is the Director of LSE.
LSE Law (@LSELaw) is an integral part of the School’s mission, plays a major role in policy debates \u0026 in the education of lawyers and law teachers from around the world.

What is the Welfare State? A Sociological Restatement

All Asian Countries From Poorest To Richest Ranking 2021.


All Asian Countries From Poorest To Richest Ranking.We are going to rank all the Asian countries by by their GDP nominal per capita. GDP per capita is often considered an indicator of a country’s standard of living.
Per capita income (PCI) or average income measures the average income earned per person in a given area (city, region, country, etc.) in a specified year. It is calculated by dividing the area’s total income by its total population.

The list also includes transcontinental countries that are located in more than one continent.

AsiaIndiaChinaPhilippinesPakistanSaudi Arabia IndonesiaUAESYRIAIranIraqIsraelrichest country poorest country

The list is based on IMF latest list of GDP nominal per capita.(Except for North korea and Palestine)

All Asian Countries From Poorest To Richest Ranking 2021.

Milton Friedman Speaks – Is Capitalism Humane?


Dr. Friedman speaks on the morality of capitalism.
The question is irrelevant. Capitalism per se is not humane or inhumane; neither is socialism. If we compare the two in terms of results, it is clear that only capitalism fosters equality and works toward social justice. The one is based on the principle of voluntary cooperation and free exchange, the other on force of position and power. In a free economy, it is hard to do good; you either have to use your own hardearned money to do it or work hard to persuade others to your course. But by the same token, it is difficult to do harm because by preventing a concentration of power, capitalism prevents people from committing sustained, serious harm. Is capitalism humane or inhumane? It is neither. But it tends to give free rein to the human values of human beings.
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Milton Friedman Speaks - Is Capitalism Humane?

Praxis Discussion Series: Youth Employment


Youth employment is one of today’s major challenges, affecting both developed and developing countries. The World Bank’s 2013 World Development Report found that 620 million are economically \”idle\” (not in education, employment or looking for work) with estimates reaching up to a staggering 70 or 80 percent in the Pacific. But what is causing youth un and underemployment? What is the role of public policy, and can we better engage the private sector in abating the problem?
Watch a discussion on how to address this issues with panelists Stephen Close, Human Development Specialist at the World Bank; Richard Curtain, Public Policy Consultant in TimorLeste and the Pacific, and Visiting Fellow at the Development Policy Centre, and Dr Jioji Ravulo, Lecturer, Social Work and Community Welfare Studies, University of Western Sydney.
This event is part of the Praxis Discussion Series 2013, connecting to Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and TimorLeste.
Recorded: Friday, October 4th
Moderator
Auskar Surbakti, Journalist, ABC

Praxis Discussion Series: Youth Employment

นอกจากการดูหัวข้อนี้แล้ว คุณยังสามารถเข้าถึงบทวิจารณ์ดีๆ อื่นๆ อีกมากมายได้ที่นี่: ดูบทความเพิ่มเติมในหมวดหมู่Sales experience

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