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Public Welfare Provision, Scandinavia, and the Sheer Futility of the Sociological Approach to Politics

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  • Castles, Francis G.
  • McKinlay, R. D.

Abstract

In the last two decades, the prevailing orthodoxy in comparative studies has been the sociological view that public policy outcomes are primarily a reflection of what can loosely be described as ‘environmental’ factors: the demographic structure of the population, the incremental logic of policy programmes, and, most important of all, the level of economic development. This paper has two main objectives: first, to demonstrate that the sociological orthodoxy is methodologically and empirically unsound in its central tenet that politics does not matter, and, second, to provide a more detailed, and political, explanation of the particularly high levels of public welfare provision that characterize the Scandinavian countries.

Suggested Citation

  • Castles, Francis G. & McKinlay, R. D., 1979. "Public Welfare Provision, Scandinavia, and the Sheer Futility of the Sociological Approach to Politics," British Journal of Political Science, Cambridge University Press, vol. 9(2), pages 157-171, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:bjposi:v:9:y:1979:i:02:p:157-171_00
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