Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States

This article analyzes the relationship between the social and climate policies of the European Union member states and examines the concept of the eco–social state. In the climate crisis era, the need for a close link between social and climate policies is particularly acute. The European Green Deal...

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Main Authors: Ulijona Kaklauskaitė, Jekaterina Navickė
Format: Article
Language:Lithuanian
Published: Vilnius University Press 2021-07-01
Series:STEPP: Socialinė Teorija, Empirija, Politika ir Praktika
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/STEPP/article/view/22954
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spelling doaj-18d00e11c200461abbe01cf7ac1742e72021-07-29T09:27:40ZlitVilnius University PressSTEPP: Socialinė Teorija, Empirija, Politika ir Praktika1648-24252345-02662021-07-012210.15388/STEPP.2021.32Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member StatesUlijona Kaklauskaitė0Jekaterina Navickė1Vilnius University, LithuaniaVilnius University, LithuaniaThis article analyzes the relationship between the social and climate policies of the European Union member states and examines the concept of the eco–social state. In the climate crisis era, the need for a close link between social and climate policies is particularly acute. The European Green Deal and other EU strategies reflect a political agenda with a specific interest in social and ecological goals. We aim to answer whether more significant state efforts in the social field are related to a similarly more substantial commitment in climate policy or whether a greater focus on one means less attention on another.  On a theoretical level, we discuss the challenges of climate change for social policy and present the concept of climate justice. The similarities and differences between the ecological and the welfare state are also examined. We argue that the concept of climate justice highlights the phenomenon of a double and even triple injustice on a global level, which requires joint efforts in spheres of social and climate policy. Eco-social state combines social and environmental institutions intending to ensure welfare and sustainability and thus complements the traditional concept of the welfare state. The Koch-Fritz (2014) classification, which distinguishes between the established, deadlocked, emerging, and failing eco-social states, is presented in the paper and used for the empirical analysis.  The empirical part of the paper employs non-parametrical correlation and hierarchical cluster analysis. The former allows for exploring the links between the ecological and social indicators. The latter enables countries to be grouped according to social and climate indicators and compared to the traditional classification of welfare states and Koch-Fritz models of eco-social states. The analysis is based on social and climate indicators of the Europe 2020 strategy. The study found that countries that provide relatively more significant funding for traditional social problems also perform better in climate change adaptation and mitigation policies by reducing greenhouse gas emissions in an effort–sharing sectors and final energy consumption. We show that clusters of the EU member states in terms of social and climate indicators (eco–social state models) are very similar to their membership in the traditional welfare states’ classification. Moreover, social democratic welfare states are better prepared to address climate change than countries representing other types of welfare states. Thus the analysis confirms the social democratic welfare states as established eco–social states, while the conservative-corporate and liberal welfare states can indeed be called deadlocked eco–social states with average results. We show, however, that Lithuania, together with other Eastern European and Southern European countries, fluctuates on both the best and the worst social and climate change mitigation outcomes. Hence those should be attributed to a group with the mixed results and can be named as failed-emerging eco-social states. https://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/STEPP/article/view/22954welfare stateclimate policyEuropean Unioneco-social state
collection DOAJ
language Lithuanian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ulijona Kaklauskaitė
Jekaterina Navickė
spellingShingle Ulijona Kaklauskaitė
Jekaterina Navickė
Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
STEPP: Socialinė Teorija, Empirija, Politika ir Praktika
welfare state
climate policy
European Union
eco-social state
author_facet Ulijona Kaklauskaitė
Jekaterina Navickė
author_sort Ulijona Kaklauskaitė
title Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
title_short Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
title_full Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
title_fullStr Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
title_full_unstemmed Eco-social State in the European Union: the Relationship Between the Social and Climate Policy of the Member States
title_sort eco-social state in the european union: the relationship between the social and climate policy of the member states
publisher Vilnius University Press
series STEPP: Socialinė Teorija, Empirija, Politika ir Praktika
issn 1648-2425
2345-0266
publishDate 2021-07-01
description This article analyzes the relationship between the social and climate policies of the European Union member states and examines the concept of the eco–social state. In the climate crisis era, the need for a close link between social and climate policies is particularly acute. The European Green Deal and other EU strategies reflect a political agenda with a specific interest in social and ecological goals. We aim to answer whether more significant state efforts in the social field are related to a similarly more substantial commitment in climate policy or whether a greater focus on one means less attention on another.  On a theoretical level, we discuss the challenges of climate change for social policy and present the concept of climate justice. The similarities and differences between the ecological and the welfare state are also examined. We argue that the concept of climate justice highlights the phenomenon of a double and even triple injustice on a global level, which requires joint efforts in spheres of social and climate policy. Eco-social state combines social and environmental institutions intending to ensure welfare and sustainability and thus complements the traditional concept of the welfare state. The Koch-Fritz (2014) classification, which distinguishes between the established, deadlocked, emerging, and failing eco-social states, is presented in the paper and used for the empirical analysis.  The empirical part of the paper employs non-parametrical correlation and hierarchical cluster analysis. The former allows for exploring the links between the ecological and social indicators. The latter enables countries to be grouped according to social and climate indicators and compared to the traditional classification of welfare states and Koch-Fritz models of eco-social states. The analysis is based on social and climate indicators of the Europe 2020 strategy. The study found that countries that provide relatively more significant funding for traditional social problems also perform better in climate change adaptation and mitigation policies by reducing greenhouse gas emissions in an effort–sharing sectors and final energy consumption. We show that clusters of the EU member states in terms of social and climate indicators (eco–social state models) are very similar to their membership in the traditional welfare states’ classification. Moreover, social democratic welfare states are better prepared to address climate change than countries representing other types of welfare states. Thus the analysis confirms the social democratic welfare states as established eco–social states, while the conservative-corporate and liberal welfare states can indeed be called deadlocked eco–social states with average results. We show, however, that Lithuania, together with other Eastern European and Southern European countries, fluctuates on both the best and the worst social and climate change mitigation outcomes. Hence those should be attributed to a group with the mixed results and can be named as failed-emerging eco-social states.
topic welfare state
climate policy
European Union
eco-social state
url https://www.zurnalai.vu.lt/STEPP/article/view/22954
work_keys_str_mv AT ulijonakaklauskaite ecosocialstateintheeuropeanuniontherelationshipbetweenthesocialandclimatepolicyofthememberstates
AT jekaterinanavicke ecosocialstateintheeuropeanuniontherelationshipbetweenthesocialandclimatepolicyofthememberstates
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