Volume 22, Issue 3
Mini‐symposium

Alike but not alike: Welfare state and unemployment policies in Southern Europe. Italy and Portugal compared

Simone Baglioni

Corresponding Author

Department of Social Sciences, Media and Journalism, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK

Simone Baglioni, Department of Social Sciences, Media and Journalism, Glasgow Caledonian University, Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow G4 0BA, United Kingdom

E‐mail: simone.baglioni@gcu.ac.uk

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Luis F. Oliveira Mota

Department of Social Work, Technical University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal

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First published: 12 March 2013
Citations: 5

Abstract

Although Italy and Portugal are considered to be part of the same welfare state family – the Southern European one – analysis of a key component of the welfare state, namely, unemployment policies and regulations, reveals a different evaluation. A comparative analysis of a series of specific indicators of Italian and Portuguese unemployment regimes shows that they represent two different models. Portugal appears to be a more inclusive system, closer to continental or Northern European countries than it is to Italy, or at least representing a hybrid system that combines characteristics of continental European welfare states with characteristics that are more typical of Southern European welfare states. Italy, on the contrary, is much more clearly a Southern European welfare state.

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