FSP - Public Policies
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Browsing FSP - Public Policies by Author "Dragolea, Alina"
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Item Gen și interese politice : teorii și practici(Polirom, 2007) Băluță, Oana; Dragolea, Alina; Iancu, AliceWhat do citizens want from politicians? How do they allocate public goods? From whom and how would they take taxes if they so decided? Is it relevant whether citizens are women or men? The great grievances of the inhabitants of this country are related to the most underfunded areas of public interest: health, education, social protection, civilizing infrastructure. As in these areas, by political decision, the lowest salaries of all budgetary areas are practiced, women earn little, even if they have higher qualified professions. They are condemned to poverty and dependency not because they are idle, do not work and do not study, but because the policy of all governments has been constructed in such a way that public money is not allocated or is very little precisely for the work of raising, educating and caring for them. In this volume, the authors set out to present the theoretical tools underlying the gender analysis of political interests and to apply them in a few cases, in everyday life, in the labor market or in the study of social exclusion. (Mihaela Miroiu)Item Statul bunăstării după criza economică : între realitatea austerităţii şi necesitatea reformei(Tritonic, 2016) Dragolea, AlinaIn the context of the general dualization of the labour market, the labour market shows a specific segmentation. This is manifested not only in terms of occupational categories and branches of activity, but also in terms of job security, size and stability of income, social security contributions, opportunities for promotion, and the possibility of union membership. The division of the labor market into two "sectors" of the market produces the segmentation of welfare policies by creating dual social protection systems between typical and atypical workers, being a dimension of inequalities in social rights. In this paper, we analyzed the transposition of this segmentation into social security systems, more specifically we explored the precariousness of social protection in atypical work in the Romanian context. National social protection systems have been developed mainly to protect people in standard employment. This is particularly true for the social insurance system based on contributory benefits, i.e. on the collection of funds from future beneficiaries according to the amount of contribution. Thus, I aimed to highlight the disadvantages that atypical workers in Romania face in terms of the accumulation of social security contributions.