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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jingjing Huo (University of Waterloo, Ontario)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.10cm , Height: 0.40cm , Length: 24.80cm Weight: 0.619kg ISBN: 9781316501108ISBN 10: 1316501108 Pages: 374 Publication Date: 17 December 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsAnyone who wishes to understand the changes in political-economic strategies European Social Democrats have undergone in the past two decades will want to turn to Huo's detailed account. It provides a comprehensive overview, organized within a clear analytical framework that enables us to identify the differential explanatory power of important theoretical frameworks commonly employed in the comparative study of welfare states and macro-economic policy-making. More generally, Huo's study helps to grasp the dynamic of institutional change. -Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University This book marks a major leap forward in the study of social democracy. Analyzing the theory and implementation of 'Third Way' reforms in exhaustive detail across nine cases, spanning Scandinavia, Western Europe and the Antipodes, Huo engages critically with the mainstream approaches in the literature, including the notion of path-dependence in determining policy outcomes, proposing a power-resources argument in their stead. His contention that the 'Third Way' is a principled renewal rather than a retreat from social democratic tradition will raise plenty of controversy. -Martin Rhodes, University of Denver No one has conceptualized so clearly social democratic 'third-way' policies as Huo does in this book. Nor has anyone provided such an insightful analysis of their development, implementation and degrees of success in a relatively large number of countries. The central argument is important: partisan politics and governance, especially social democratic party electoral success and rule, while institutionally constrained, is the key to understanding cross-national differences and change in labor market and employment policies in post-industrial democracies. The book can be highly recommended to all students and scholars of comparative and European political economy. -Duane Swank, Marquette University “Anyone who wishes to understand the changes in political-economic strategies European Social Democrats have undergone in the past two decades will want to turn to Huo’s detailed account. It provides a comprehensive overview, organized within a clear analytical framework that enables us to identify the differential explanatory power of important theoretical frameworks commonly employed in the comparative study of welfare states and macro-economic policy-making. More generally, Huo’s study helps to grasp the dynamic of institutional change.” -Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University “This book marks a major leap forward in the study of social democracy. Analyzing the theory and implementation of ‘Third Way’ reforms in exhaustive detail across nine cases, spanning Scandinavia, Western Europe and the Antipodes, Huo engages critically with the mainstream approaches in the literature, including the notion of path-dependence in determining policy outcomes, proposing a power-resources argument in their stead. His contention that the ‘Third Way’ is a principled renewal rather than a retreat from social democratic tradition will raise plenty of controversy.” -Martin Rhodes, University of Denver “No one has conceptualized so clearly social democratic ‘third-way’ policies as Huo does in this book. Nor has anyone provided such an insightful analysis of their development, implementation and degrees of success in a relatively large number of countries. The central argument is important: partisan politics and governance, especially social democratic party electoral success and rule, while institutionally constrained, is the key to understanding cross-national differences and change in labor market and employment policies in post-industrial democracies. The book can be highly recommended to all students and scholars of comparative and European political economy.” -Duane Swank, Marquette University Author InformationJingjing Huo earned his PhD from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and currently teaches at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada. His primary research interest is comparative political economy and institutions, and his work appears in Comparative Political Studies, the Canadian Journal of Political Science, and the Journal of European Social Policy. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |