Against the historical-conceptual background of EU social policy and evolutionary governance, this article analyses the approach with which the EU propagates social investment policies. Social investment, understood as an active rather than passive way of social protection, has become a salient instrument for reinvigorating the EU’s social dimension, especially in the aftermath of the sovereign debt crisis. By means of a large-scale document analysis, we develop four EU social investment propagation approaches (reference, objective, tool, and action) according to how active (passive) and concrete (abstract) the EU’s intervention in social investment is. The results show that the EU mainly propagates social investment with an active approach...
This report analyses and seeks to establish whether and how, in the last twenty years, the EU member...
open3noIn this paper, we first rely on small area techniques to derive from EU statistics on income ...
The contribution addresses – through actor-centred historical institutionalism – why and how social ...
Against the historical-conceptual background of EU social policy and evolutionary governance, this a...
Against the historical‐conceptual background of EU social policy and evolutionary governance, this a...
The most competitive economies in the European Union (EU) spend more on social policy and public ser...
This EPC issue paper is an urgent call to put social investment at the centre of the EU’s policy age...
This article reconstructs how, under the umbrella of the Europea Union (EU), discreet opportunities ...
High levels of public debt, pressure on government expenditures, and existing financial regulations ...
The social investment perspective has recently been defined has a new perspective for social policie...
The concept of a Social Investment welfare paradigm has become highly influential in public policy g...
In this Opinion Paper, we argue that long term-goals of social and economic policy in the EU must no...
Executive summaryDuring the Lisbon Summit in 2000, the European Union – partly inspired by the new ‘...
The European Union’s social policy perspectives have changed quite dramatically over the last severa...
International audienceThis chapter focuses on why and how social investment has developed at the Eur...
This report analyses and seeks to establish whether and how, in the last twenty years, the EU member...
open3noIn this paper, we first rely on small area techniques to derive from EU statistics on income ...
The contribution addresses – through actor-centred historical institutionalism – why and how social ...
Against the historical-conceptual background of EU social policy and evolutionary governance, this a...
Against the historical‐conceptual background of EU social policy and evolutionary governance, this a...
The most competitive economies in the European Union (EU) spend more on social policy and public ser...
This EPC issue paper is an urgent call to put social investment at the centre of the EU’s policy age...
This article reconstructs how, under the umbrella of the Europea Union (EU), discreet opportunities ...
High levels of public debt, pressure on government expenditures, and existing financial regulations ...
The social investment perspective has recently been defined has a new perspective for social policie...
The concept of a Social Investment welfare paradigm has become highly influential in public policy g...
In this Opinion Paper, we argue that long term-goals of social and economic policy in the EU must no...
Executive summaryDuring the Lisbon Summit in 2000, the European Union – partly inspired by the new ‘...
The European Union’s social policy perspectives have changed quite dramatically over the last severa...
International audienceThis chapter focuses on why and how social investment has developed at the Eur...
This report analyses and seeks to establish whether and how, in the last twenty years, the EU member...
open3noIn this paper, we first rely on small area techniques to derive from EU statistics on income ...
The contribution addresses – through actor-centred historical institutionalism – why and how social ...