New article on "Associational Networks and Welfare States in Argentina, Brazil, South Korea, and Taiwan"
Cheol-Sung Lee (2012)
Abstract
This article investigates the structures of civic networks and their
roles in steering the political choices of party and union elites
regarding the retrenchment or expansion of welfare states in four
recently democratized developing countries. Utilizing coaffiliation
networks built upon two waves of World Values Surveys and
evidence from comparative case studies for Argentina, Brazil, South
Korea, and Taiwan, the study develops two explanatory factors that
account for variations in welfare politics: cohesiveness and
embeddedness. In Argentina and, to a lesser degree, in Taiwan, party and
union leaders’ cohesive relationships, being disarticulated from the
informal civic sphere, allowed them to conduct elite-driven social
policy reforms from above, by launching radical neoliberal reforms
(Argentina) or by developing a generous transfer-centered welfare state
(Taiwan). In Brazil and South Korea, however, party and union leaders’
durable solidarity embedded in wider civic communities enabled them to
resist the retrenchment of welfare states (Brazil) or implement
universal social policies (South Korea) based on bottom-up mobilization
of welfare demands. This article demonstrates that elites in the formal
sector make markedly different political choices when confronting
economic crisis and democratic competition depending upon their
organizational connections in formal and informal civic networks.
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