8th ESPAnet Conference 2010

Social Policy and the Global Crisis:
Consequences and Responses

Budapest 2-4 September 2010


Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Faculty of Social Sciences
Pázmány Péter sétány 1/A,
H-1117 Budapest, Hungary

Streams

 

Stream (short title) Convenor(s)

1. Migrants, Ethnic Minorities and Social Policy

Willibrord de Graaf


2. Poverty and Social Exclusion


Bea Cantillon


3. Comparative Methodology


Patrick Emmenegger
Olli Kangas


4. Gender Equity and Social Policy


Steven Saxonberg
Hana Hasková


5. Social Work and Social Policy: Control or Empowerment?


John Gal


6. The Crisis and Social Citizenship


Robert Maier
Patricia Frericks


7.1 Economic Crisis and Social Policy Reaction


Bent Greve


7.2. Economic Crisis and Social Policy Consequences


Kevin Doogan


8.1. Minimum Incomes in the Enlarged Europe


Manos Matsaganis
Cristina Rat


8.2. Social Assistance


Thomas Bahle
Kenneth Nelson


9.1. Youth on Volatile Labour Markets


Dirk Hofaecker


9.2. Employment Policies Requested – Social Risks and Risk Management of Globalised Economy


Pertti Koistinen
Amparo Serrano-Pasqua


9.3. European Welfare States and Labor Markets in Situations of Crises


Werner Eichhorst
Minna van Gerven


10. Pension Policies


Karl Hinrichs


11.1. European Public Health Care Systems and Institutional-Organisational Change: an Evaluation of their Performance


Ana M. Guillén
Emmanuele Pavolini


11.2. Fit for Work in Europe? Health, Employability and Challenges for Activation in an Era of Crisis


Colin Lindsay
Donald Houston


11.3. Post-Crises Health Policies: Challenges and Opportunities


Éva Orosz


12.1. Transnational Care Markets: European Care Regimes in the Age of Migration


Margarita León
Costanzo Ranci


12.2. Local care policies and care work in times of global crisis


Birgit Pfau-Effinger
Hildegard Theobald


13. Family Policies and the Reconciling of Paid Work and Care


Mia Hakovirta
Anita Haataja


14. Post-Socialist Welfare Systems


Alfio Cerami


15. Public Futures


John Clarke
Janet Newman


16. Welfare State Attitudes and Economic Crisis


Dr. Ursula Dallinger
Dr. Ferry Koster


17. The Role of Employers in Pensions, Childcare and Active Labour Market Policy


Traute Meyer
Guiliano Bonoli


18. Financing the welfare state: challenges, reforms and outcomes


Nathalie Morel
Joakim Palme

Eötvös Loránd University Budapest FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
Eötvös Loránd University Budapest
www.erstestiftung.org

Important dates

17 November 2009 = Call for stream convenors
18 December 2009 = Deadline for stream convenors
25 January 2010 = Call for abstracts
29 March 2010 = Deadline for abstract submission
3 May 2010 = Registration starts
6 June 2010 = Reduced fee application deadline
21 June 2010 24:00 (CET) = Early bird registration deadline
13 August 2010 24:00 (CET) - Deadline for submission of papers
16 August 2010 - Deadline for Registrations and payments

Registration fee is 160 Euros for early birds, 210 Euros for late birds. Central and Eastern European PhD students and professionals can apply for a reduced fee of 60 Euros at info@espanet2010.net until 6th June.
Registration opens on the 3rd May, early bird registration closes on the 21th June at 24:00 (CET).

Theme of the Conference

The theme of ESPAnet’s 2010 Annual Conference is the social consequences of the global financial crisis and its differential impact across Europe. The main questions for consideration include:
How is the crisis affecting already existing inequalities? How are different social classes and groups, especially those in poverty, affected by the crisis? What are the adaptable capacities of the different “worlds of welfare”? Does the intensifying social vulnerability lead to the re-structuring of the programs to provide more security? How far have new programs been developed, and how far have new questions of social policy and welfare been opened up by the crisis?
We would like to broaden the horizon of social policy analysis and see global environmental concerns taken into account: How far are responses to the crisis re-thinking the role of the national and international/global state and the role of the European Union in creating economically, socially and environmentally sustainable societies?