Ten years on: Francis G. Castles and the Australian 'wage-earners' welfare state'
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Sociology
- Vol. 33 (1) , 1-15
- https://doi.org/10.1177/144078339703300101
Abstract
Francis Castles' The Working Class and Welfare (1985) has achieved classic status within mainstream policy studies and the historiography of the Australian welfare state. Exhuming the functionalist theoretical and 'positivist' methodo logical assumptions embedded in his prior comparative policy research helps to establish why he saw the puzzles he did in the Australasian experience and why the 'wage-earner's welfare state' model emerged as an answer to those puzzles. Castles' work reminds us that our theoretical and methodological assumptions can lead to a problem-setting process that generates a sophistic ated but misleading social heuristic. Castles' work, while it appears to affirm that 'politics matters' denies the contingency of history central to political processes. While he rightly insists we should look at 'occupational welfare', his work deflects attention away from the substantial experience with 'social policy by normal means' that labor governments have promoted.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE WAGE EARNERS' WELFARE STATE REVISITED: REFURBISHING THE ESTABLISHED MODEL OF AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL PROTECTION, 1983–93Australian Journal of Social Issues, 1994
- Welfare and the StatePublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1992
- The New Historicism and Other Old-Fashioned TopicsPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1991
- The Price of HealthPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1991
- Class and Gender in Australian Income SecurityJournal of Sociology, 1988
- Comparing Social Policies: Some Problems of Method and the Case of Social Security Benefits in Australia, Britain and the USAJournal of Social Policy, 1988
- Thirty wasted years: Australian social security development, 1950–80, in comparative perspectivePolitics, 1987
- The Development of Welfare States: The Production of Plausible AccountsJournal of Social Policy, 1977
- Social policy and social change – explanations of the development of social policyJournal of Social Policy, 1973