keonhison.bsky.social
Research Fellow at MZES and Visiting Scholar at Sciences po | previously SOCIUM Bremen & MPIfG (visiting) | Comparative Welfare Research | Historical Political Economy | Gender Study
keonhison.com
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(3) "The Origin of Social Policy for Women Workers: The Emergence of Paid Maternity Leave in Western Countries" by Keonhi Son @keonhison.bsky.social
journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....
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www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
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congratulations, Cassandra!! Amazing news š
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If you have any question, please don't hesitate to message me!
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We are interested in how partisan politics, institutional frameworks, organized interests, institutional legacies and the timing and intensity of crises account for the temporal and cross-national variations in welfare state responses.
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More discussion is needed on barriers to accessing āentitledā social security benefits in LMICs, as expanding welfare laws is only a first step toward universal access. Micro-level analysis, for example, could explore individual factors affecting benefit access.
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The discrepancy is also persistent in LMICs, which could be not be automatically solved by having a long history of social insurance systems.
Further more, low state capacity, prevalent corruption, and poor policy design impede the effective implementation of social insurance legislation.
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Using my database of maternity leave, it analyzes the gap between de jure and de facto coverage of maternity leave in 73 LMICs. While 34% ensure de jure universal coverage and 66% include the self-employed, only a few Eastern European countries likely reach over 90% of women workers.
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The results are based on a newly compiled data set that covers information on the annual number of children in full-time day care places in 108 German cities over a time span of 15 years. The data further covers information on the economic and political context of a city. 2/3
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I started this project three years ago when unsuccessfully begging for a full day care spot for my daughter. If you were searching for people close to becoming āWutbürgerā, you just had to visit playing grounds in Mannheim and talk to the frustrated parents. 3/3