Studies analysing welfare have previously focused on countries as units. In the course of pension cuts and the increasing importance of occupational welfare, our traditional understanding of a homogeneous welfare state is being challenged. In this article, I distinguish between both economic individual power (employee skills) and political collective power (trade unions), and their relation with different occupational pensions. A combined analysis by both factors is not common, where employee skills and power resources are traditionally treated as separate, rival explanations of public welfare. Combining the ‘method of difference with the ‘method of agreement, the article first presents the within-country variety of occupational pensions in...
This new edited volume on occupational welfare in Europe is based on research projects coordinated b...
Pensions have become one of the key issues on the industrial relations agenda across Europe. Many na...
Around 1990, trade unions in both Norway and Denmark moved away from their previous hostile stance, ...
In this article, we discuss the role of trade unions in the evolution of occupational pensions in fo...
Following the seminal work of Richard Titmuss, who coined the term occupational welfare (OW) 60 year...
As public pensions are being retrenched across Europe there is an ongoing shift towards occupational...
The social expectations placed on employers in welfare states have been increasing. In a range of po...
The article focuses on Italy—a typical example of the Southern European model—and the recent evolut...
This study investigates the association between eligibility for occupational welfare and employees’ ...
In the analysis of redistribution, not only models based on the territory principle should be consid...
By the end of the twentieth century, the generous German public pay-as-you-go pension system had bee...
The article’s starting point is that the now-conventional conceptualization of welfare state retrenc...
This article challenges Paul Pierson’s account on the (supposedly declining) role of labor unions in...
This new edited volume on occupational welfare in Europe is based on research projects coordinated b...
Pensions have become one of the key issues on the industrial relations agenda across Europe. Many na...
Around 1990, trade unions in both Norway and Denmark moved away from their previous hostile stance, ...
In this article, we discuss the role of trade unions in the evolution of occupational pensions in fo...
Following the seminal work of Richard Titmuss, who coined the term occupational welfare (OW) 60 year...
As public pensions are being retrenched across Europe there is an ongoing shift towards occupational...
The social expectations placed on employers in welfare states have been increasing. In a range of po...
The article focuses on Italy—a typical example of the Southern European model—and the recent evolut...
This study investigates the association between eligibility for occupational welfare and employees’ ...
In the analysis of redistribution, not only models based on the territory principle should be consid...
By the end of the twentieth century, the generous German public pay-as-you-go pension system had bee...
The article’s starting point is that the now-conventional conceptualization of welfare state retrenc...
This article challenges Paul Pierson’s account on the (supposedly declining) role of labor unions in...
This new edited volume on occupational welfare in Europe is based on research projects coordinated b...
Pensions have become one of the key issues on the industrial relations agenda across Europe. Many na...
Around 1990, trade unions in both Norway and Denmark moved away from their previous hostile stance, ...