Although computer technology is central to the operation of the modern welfare state, there has been little analysis of its role or of the factors shaping the way in which it is used. Using data generated by expert informants from 13 OECD countries, this paper provides an indicative comparison of the aims of computerization in national social security systems over a 15-year period from 1985 to 2000. The paper seeks to identify and explain patterns in the data and outlines and examines four hypotheses. Building on social constructivist accounts of technology, the first three hypotheses attribute variations in the aims of computerization to different welfare state regimes, forms of capitalism, and structures of public administration. The four...
Comparative studies of democratization point to a multitude of explanatory factors, while often lack...
Numerous social policy analysts have suggested that globalisation and the emergence of more knowledg...
This paper reviews the methodological issues raised by different commentators' attempts to categoris...
Recent welfare state developments have emphasized the structure, administration and governance of se...
Part 2: Computerizing Public Sector IndustriesInternational audienceThe object of this paper is the ...
This paper examines the relationship between the use of computer-based systems and transformations i...
Comparing the social welfare situation in Japan with that of the United States, Japan has greatly la...
Purpose: Technology access, digital skills, and digital services are increasingly prerequisites for ...
Sets the history of computing in its broader economic and social context Recounts and evaluates gove...
The origin and development of welfare state has generally been explained by four major theories. The...
The absence of considerations of technology in policy studies reinforces the popular notion that tec...
The rapid diffusion of computers has widely changed the consequences of computer use on the labour m...
We examine how important social and technical choices become part of the history of a computer-based...
Part 1: IT PolicyInternational audienceIn the 1950s and 1960s computers became part and parcel of th...
Part 4: CoCom and ComeconInternational audienceThis article investigates the role of the first digit...
Comparative studies of democratization point to a multitude of explanatory factors, while often lack...
Numerous social policy analysts have suggested that globalisation and the emergence of more knowledg...
This paper reviews the methodological issues raised by different commentators' attempts to categoris...
Recent welfare state developments have emphasized the structure, administration and governance of se...
Part 2: Computerizing Public Sector IndustriesInternational audienceThe object of this paper is the ...
This paper examines the relationship between the use of computer-based systems and transformations i...
Comparing the social welfare situation in Japan with that of the United States, Japan has greatly la...
Purpose: Technology access, digital skills, and digital services are increasingly prerequisites for ...
Sets the history of computing in its broader economic and social context Recounts and evaluates gove...
The origin and development of welfare state has generally been explained by four major theories. The...
The absence of considerations of technology in policy studies reinforces the popular notion that tec...
The rapid diffusion of computers has widely changed the consequences of computer use on the labour m...
We examine how important social and technical choices become part of the history of a computer-based...
Part 1: IT PolicyInternational audienceIn the 1950s and 1960s computers became part and parcel of th...
Part 4: CoCom and ComeconInternational audienceThis article investigates the role of the first digit...
Comparative studies of democratization point to a multitude of explanatory factors, while often lack...
Numerous social policy analysts have suggested that globalisation and the emergence of more knowledg...
This paper reviews the methodological issues raised by different commentators' attempts to categoris...