TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards the individualization of social rights
T2 - Hidden familialistic practices in Spanish social policy
AU - León, Margarita
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - The article evaluates how gender issues have been conceptualized in the development and consolidation of Spanish social policy and specifically, in the social protection system. Transformations in social policy from the Franco regime to the present have been informed by shifts in the understanding of familialism, considered as a dimension of variation in social provision centred on the family and women's unpaid work. Conservative-corporatist in its origins, the Spanish welfare state initially displayed features of a typical male-breadwinner model. Since democratization, there have been significant moves away from the original type, with many changes driven by concerns for gender equality. Familialism, no longer the ideology behind welfare policies, is reinforced in practice through certain welfare programmes, chiefly the social security system, and persists at the level of social organization. Spanish 'familialism' is distinctively different from the continental model but remarkably consistent with that of other south European countries.
AB - The article evaluates how gender issues have been conceptualized in the development and consolidation of Spanish social policy and specifically, in the social protection system. Transformations in social policy from the Franco regime to the present have been informed by shifts in the understanding of familialism, considered as a dimension of variation in social provision centred on the family and women's unpaid work. Conservative-corporatist in its origins, the Spanish welfare state initially displayed features of a typical male-breadwinner model. Since democratization, there have been significant moves away from the original type, with many changes driven by concerns for gender equality. Familialism, no longer the ideology behind welfare policies, is reinforced in practice through certain welfare programmes, chiefly the social security system, and persists at the level of social organization. Spanish 'familialism' is distinctively different from the continental model but remarkably consistent with that of other south European countries.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0142009618&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13608740708539633
DO - 10.1080/13608740708539633
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0142009618
SN - 1360-8746
VL - 7
SP - 53
EP - 80
JO - South European Society and Politics
JF - South European Society and Politics
IS - 3
ER -