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The idea that European welfare states are struggling to meet new social risks
during a process of adaptation to a post-industrial setting has been an
acknowledged theory in welfare state research for some time. The authors of
this remarkable book have chosen to study a powerful indicator of how this
trend might affect legal protection and access to justice for individuals:
reforms in social security systems as they apply to cases of reduced earnings
capacity. While previously the notion of social protection made welfare state
inhabitants feel that the risk of loss of income due to physical or
psychological hindrances was minimal, this sense of security can no longer be
taken for granted.
This book presents in-depth analyses, by nine leading scholars in social
security law, of recent reforms in the field of incapacity benefits in four
European countries: Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Sweden.
The authors emphasize how recent reforms in the field of social security have
been transformed into legal provisions, how the gate-keeping function is
implemented in the legislation of the different countries, and to what extent
the reforms have affected the legal position of the individuals concerned.
They find that ever-tightening requirements designed to reduce benefit
dependency, in combination with policies emphasizing individual
responsibilities rather than individual rights, cause increased social risks
for exposed groups. Among the specific aspects covered are the following:
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Measuring the reduction of earnings capacity;
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rights and obligations attached to reintegration into the labour market;
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work capability assessment procedures;
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‘rehabilitation chains’ with fixed time limits;
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the real and increased risk of poverty faced by long-term incapacitated
persons;
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constitutional concerns raised by increased dependency on means-tested
benefits;
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conditionality of benefits on work-related activities, participation in
training programmes, or active job searching; and
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sanctions that can be applied if the claimant fails to comply with activation
measures.
All the country chapters provide thorough surveys of recent reforms, as well
as analyses of their different weaknesses and strengths. The European
dimension is explored with particular reference to anti-discrimination
legislation, health and safety law as well as the Open Method of Coordination.
As a systematic analysis of the current reforms relating to reduced earnings
capacity, this book will attract a wide readership among lawyers and
policymakers for its thorough coverage of the current landscape and the
far-reaching implications it suggests. The book’s systematic comparative
method sheds a bright light on the challenges faced by post-industrial
European welfare states, and its crystallization of the legal strategies
behind the individual legal measures and reforms deepens our understanding of
the institutions of social security and our awareness of the rights and
obligations of exposed individuals.
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1 Introduction
Stamatia Devetzi and Sara Stendahl
Chapter 2 The European Social Model and Reforms of Incapacity Benefits
Eberhard Eichenhofer
Chapter 3 ‘Incapacity for Work’: A National Legal Concept with
Cross-National Functions
Thomas Erhag
Chapter 4 Extra Capacity in the Labour Market?: ESA and the Activation
of the Sick and Disabled in the UK
Neville Harris and Simon Rahilly
Chapter 5 The New Dutch Disability Benefits Act: The Link between
Income Provision and Participation in Work
Frans Pennings
Chapter 6 The Complicated Made Simple? The Reinfeldt Government's
2006–2010 Reforms of Swedish Social Security Protection for Those with Reduced
Capacity for Work
Sara Stendahl
Chapter 7 Long-Term Incapacity Benefits in Germany
Sylvia Dünn
Chapter 8 The Notion of Incapacity in German Social Security Law and
the Interrelation between Unemployment and Invalidity
Hans-Joachim Reinhard
Chapter 9 Incapacity Benefits – Comparing Legal Reforms and Legal
Strategies
Sara Stendahl and Stamatia Devetzi
Chapter 10 Reforms of Incapacity Benefits Systems in Europe
Stamatia Devetzi
Index