The concept of social quality has been operationalized in terms of four component dimensions: social inclustion, social cohesion, socio-economic security and social empowerment. This article argues that inclusion and cohesion are aspects of the same underlying social construct. Societies are cohesive to the extent that they are bound by relationships of solidarity; people are included when they are part of solidaristic social networks. Where there is cohesion, there is solidarity, and where there is solidarity, there is inclusion. It follows that the attempt to define social quality in terms of a formal distiction between inclusion and cohesion is doomed to failure. They cannot be treated as distict elements, and the attempt to distinguish ...
none1noThis article examines the relationships between social cohesion and social inequalities in Eu...
Social goals and social action are increasingly framed by a host of ambiguously egalitarian notions....
Social cohesion dates back to the end of the nineteenth century. Back then, society experienced epoc...
Abstract: The notion of social cohesion is widely used to discuss current economic, social, and poli...
The paper has three tasks. The first is to define the concept of social cohesion within the framewor...
In this article, the authors evaluate whether the provision of good quality social services has the ...
Academics as well as policy-makers consider social cohesion to be an important quality of cities. A...
This article aims to make progress towards an account of social cohesion and participation in terms ...
The article looks at competing conceptions of solidarity. The main focus lies on the universality or...
This thematic issue aims to shed light on the connections between institutions (and related forms of...
In this Discussion Paper, Claire Dhéret argues that the EU should consider the level of social cohes...
This paper interrogates a concept at the core of a social policy agenda that has dominated thinking ...
textabstractAbstract Academics as well as policy-makers consider social cohesion to be an important...
Social cohesion is a complex notion, subject to various different approaches that we set out to anal...
Written as three publishable papers, this dissertation examines the individual, community and nation...
none1noThis article examines the relationships between social cohesion and social inequalities in Eu...
Social goals and social action are increasingly framed by a host of ambiguously egalitarian notions....
Social cohesion dates back to the end of the nineteenth century. Back then, society experienced epoc...
Abstract: The notion of social cohesion is widely used to discuss current economic, social, and poli...
The paper has three tasks. The first is to define the concept of social cohesion within the framewor...
In this article, the authors evaluate whether the provision of good quality social services has the ...
Academics as well as policy-makers consider social cohesion to be an important quality of cities. A...
This article aims to make progress towards an account of social cohesion and participation in terms ...
The article looks at competing conceptions of solidarity. The main focus lies on the universality or...
This thematic issue aims to shed light on the connections between institutions (and related forms of...
In this Discussion Paper, Claire Dhéret argues that the EU should consider the level of social cohes...
This paper interrogates a concept at the core of a social policy agenda that has dominated thinking ...
textabstractAbstract Academics as well as policy-makers consider social cohesion to be an important...
Social cohesion is a complex notion, subject to various different approaches that we set out to anal...
Written as three publishable papers, this dissertation examines the individual, community and nation...
none1noThis article examines the relationships between social cohesion and social inequalities in Eu...
Social goals and social action are increasingly framed by a host of ambiguously egalitarian notions....
Social cohesion dates back to the end of the nineteenth century. Back then, society experienced epoc...