Logics of reciprocity in Denmark: Longing and belonging in a virtuous cycle of welfare

Olivia Spalletta
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Abstract

Nordic welfare states are characterized by universal access to generous welfare services, including education, health care, and developmental support. These benefits are maintained through a shared commitment to economic reciprocity. While the centrality of reciprocity to moral and social life in Scandinavian welfare states is well established, it is less clear how citizens evaluate their own and others' reciprocity in daily life. How do everyday Danes come to know that they are reciprocating properly? What does it mean to ask “too much” of the welfare state? What are the consequences for those seen as unable to reciprocate? In this article, I examine how understandings of reciprocity emerge through welfare access and use. I argue that my Danish interlocutors approach reciprocity as an obligation to use welfare resources for the mutual benefit of citizen and society. This is a lifelong project that involves properly positioning oneself within a virtuous cycle of welfare beginning in childhood. Taking the experiences of parents raising children with Down syndrome in Denmark as an empirical point of departure, I argue that this logic of reciprocity is employed not only to justify one's own welfare use but also as an explanatory model for excluding others from benefits.
丹麦的互惠逻辑:福利良性循环中的渴望与归属感
北欧福利国家的特点是全民享有慷慨的福利服务,包括教育、医疗保健和发展支持。这些福利是通过对经济互惠的共同承诺来维持的。虽然互惠在斯堪的纳维亚福利国家的道德和社会生活中的核心地位已得到公认,但公民在日常生活中如何评价自己和他人的互惠却不太清楚。丹麦人如何知道自己的互惠行为是否恰当?对福利国家要求 "过多 "意味着什么?那些被视为无法互惠的人会有什么后果?在本文中,我将探讨如何通过福利的获取和使用来理解互惠。我认为,与我对话的丹麦人将互惠视为一种义务,即为了公民和社会的共同利益而使用福利资源。这是一项终身工程,涉及到从童年开始在福利的良性循环中正确定位自己。以丹麦抚养唐氏综合症儿童的父母的经历为实证出发点,我认为这种互惠逻辑不仅被用来证明自己使用福利的合理性,还被用来解释将他人排除在福利之外的模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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