Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States

Attention towards topics such as environmental pollution, climate change, or biodiversity has strongly increased in the last years. The struggles to balance market powers and ecological sustainability somehow evoke memories of the early days of European welfare states, when social protection emerged...

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Main Authors: Katharina Zimmermann, Paolo Graziano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1819
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spelling doaj-c72bd5811f1c418ca4e72213b52fc42f2020-11-25T01:48:39ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-02-01125181910.3390/su12051819su12051819Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare StatesKatharina Zimmermann0Paolo Graziano1Department of Socioeconomics, University of Hamburg, 20354 Hamburg, GermanyDepartment of Political Science, Law and International Studies, 27100 Padova, ItalyAttention towards topics such as environmental pollution, climate change, or biodiversity has strongly increased in the last years. The struggles to balance market powers and ecological sustainability somehow evoke memories of the early days of European welfare states, when social protection emerged as a means to prevent industrial capitalism from disruptive social tensions due to excessive social inequalities. In fact, social and environmental crises are inseparably intertwined, as ecological destruction is likely to be followed by social deprivation, and a lack of social security can be a crucial barrier for ecologically sustainable action. Our paper seeks to provide a step towards such an integrated perspective by studying problem pressure and public interventions in the area of green welfare, that is, in social and environmental protection. By using available data from Eurostat and Environmental Performance Index (EPI) databases, we contrast environmental and social performances to detect links between the social and the ecological dimension in these areas and unearth different configurations of green welfare among European countries. Our findings suggest that there are different “worlds of eco-welfare states” which only partially overlap with the more conventional “world of welfare states” but show how the Nordic countries are in the relatively-better performing cluster.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1819green welfareeco-welfare statescluster analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katharina Zimmermann
Paolo Graziano
spellingShingle Katharina Zimmermann
Paolo Graziano
Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
Sustainability
green welfare
eco-welfare states
cluster analysis
author_facet Katharina Zimmermann
Paolo Graziano
author_sort Katharina Zimmermann
title Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
title_short Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
title_full Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
title_fullStr Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
title_full_unstemmed Mapping Different Worlds of Eco-Welfare States
title_sort mapping different worlds of eco-welfare states
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Attention towards topics such as environmental pollution, climate change, or biodiversity has strongly increased in the last years. The struggles to balance market powers and ecological sustainability somehow evoke memories of the early days of European welfare states, when social protection emerged as a means to prevent industrial capitalism from disruptive social tensions due to excessive social inequalities. In fact, social and environmental crises are inseparably intertwined, as ecological destruction is likely to be followed by social deprivation, and a lack of social security can be a crucial barrier for ecologically sustainable action. Our paper seeks to provide a step towards such an integrated perspective by studying problem pressure and public interventions in the area of green welfare, that is, in social and environmental protection. By using available data from Eurostat and Environmental Performance Index (EPI) databases, we contrast environmental and social performances to detect links between the social and the ecological dimension in these areas and unearth different configurations of green welfare among European countries. Our findings suggest that there are different “worlds of eco-welfare states” which only partially overlap with the more conventional “world of welfare states” but show how the Nordic countries are in the relatively-better performing cluster.
topic green welfare
eco-welfare states
cluster analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/5/1819
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