消除儿童贫困的地方民事制度

Melanie Schinnerl, Dorothea Greiling
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在许多欧洲福利国家,儿童贫困是一个长期存在的问题,与福利国家制度无关。本文考察了比利时和奥地利的地方层面的方法,这两个国家具有社团主义福利国家的传统和三级政府。这两个国家的儿童贫困率都很高,分别为23%(奥地利)和22%(比利时)(欧盟统计局,2019年)。儿童贫困是指儿童生活在面临贫困或社会排斥风险的家庭中。这些家庭的孩子在以后的生活中变得贫穷的风险要高得多。通过在四个重点城市(安特卫普、根特、林茨和维也纳)进行案例研究,本文为多层次治理背景下社会政策本地化的新兴实证研究做出了贡献。从理论上讲,本文讨论了向地方层面调整社会政策规模的实践。该研究考察了欧盟委员会2013年的建议“投资儿童:打破不利循环”如何转化为当地的社会政策。为此,本文将重点放在地方政府与社会和团结经济合作伙伴在政策设计和服务提供水平上的地方合作上。我们的研究结果表明,这种差异已经从纵向政策制定能力开始,比利时地区的作用更大。此外,比利时有一个长期的传统,即明确的政策重点是减少儿童贫困。在《2013年建议》的所有三个支柱中,尽管取得了一些进展,但两个重点国家仍面临一些挑战,特别是在支柱二(获得负担得起的优质服务)方面。这四个城市的政策制定者在不同程度上受到社会投资范式的指导。这在林茨的采访中最为突出。在地方协同政策制定方面,根特是唯一一个制定了明确的地方扶贫计划的重点城市。在所有四个城市,都为贫困儿童及其家庭提供了针对特定群体的普遍服务。在执行消除儿童贫困的社会政策方面,各国的治理模式存在相当大的差异。虽然这两个佛兰德城市都有一个传统的制度化的地方网络来打击早期儿童贫困,但在打击儿童贫困方面,这两个奥地利城市的服务提供模式却非常分散。网络方法为提供综合服务提供了更好的机会。从更积极的方面来看,这两个奥地利城市在管理从学校到工作的过渡阶段方面提供了良好的做法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Local Civil Regimes for Combating Child Poverty
Child poverty is a persistent problem in many European welfare states, irrespective of the welfare state regime. The paper examines approaches on the local level in Belgium and Austria, two countries with a corporatist welfare state tradition and three levels of government. In both countries child poverty rates are high, with 23% (Austria) and 22% (Belgium) (Eurostat, 2019). Child poverty means that the children live in households which are at risk of poverty or social exclusion. Children of such households have a much higher risk of being poor later in life. By conducting case studies in four focus cities (Antwerp, Ghent, Linz and Vienna) the paper contributes to the emerging empirical research on the localisation of social policies in a multi-level governance context. Theoretically, the paper addresses the practices of rescaling of social policies towards the local level. The study examines how the European Commissions’ 2013 Recommendation “Investing in Children: breaking the cycle of disadvantages” is translated into the local social policies. For that purpose, the paper focuses on the local collaborations between the local governments and the partners of the social and solidarity economy on the policy design - and the service provision levels. Our findings show that the discrepancies start already with the vertical policy making competencies, with a stronger role of the Belgian regions. Also, Belgium has a longer tradition of an explicit policy focus of reducing child poverty. In all three pillars of the 2013 Recommendation, the two focus countries face some challenges, despite some progresses, in particular in pillar two (access to affordable quality services). The policy makers of the four cities are guided, in a varying degree, by the social investment paradigm. This was most prominent in the interviews in Linz. Regarding collaborative local policy making, Ghent is the only focus city with an explicit local plan to combat child poverty. In all four cities target group-specific and universal services are provided for poor children and their families. Regarding the delivery of social policies to combat child poverty, there are considerable differences in the governance modes. While both Flemish cities have a tradition of institutionalized local networks to combat early childhood poverty, the servicedelivery modes in the two Austrian cities are much fragmented, when it comes to combat child poverty. The network approach offers better chances to provide an integrated service. On a more positive note, the two Austrian cities provided good practices in managing the transition phase from school to work.
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