Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America Ruben Lo Vuolo

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America By Ruben Lo Vuolo

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America by Ruben Lo Vuolo


$142.89
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

Social protection systems in Latin America developed in a fragmented manner, offering varying access to benefits and benefit levels to population groups.

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America Summary

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America: From Cash Transfers to Rights by Ruben Lo Vuolo

Social protection systems in Latin America developed in a fragmented manner, offering varying access to benefits and benefit levels to population groups. In the context of widespread informal and precarious work, social insurance institutions could only provide limited coverage. In this context, progress toward a Citizen's Income policy in Latin America depends on the possibility of reappraising its importance for an integrated institutional system which promotes the empowerment and economic independence of people. A Citizen's Income policy is not only a cash transfer to alleviate poverty or a basic income for food. It is a basic right to improve democracy and encourage a more autonomous development of people living in profoundly unequal societies.

Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America Reviews

This is an outstanding collection of essays making a compelling case for the desirability and viability of a citizens' income, while at the same time identifying the formidable political obstacles to the implementation of such a policy. The authors contribute insights from different country experiences into the steps necessary to transition from the prevalent model of conditional cash transfers to a rights-based universalistic basic income scheme. Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America is a must read for scholars, students, and citizens concerned with policy to reduce poverty and inequality. - Evelyn Huber, Morehead Alumni Professor of Political Science and chair of the Department of Political Science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

About Ruben Lo Vuolo

Lena Lavinas Camila Arza Pablo Yanes Alice Krozer Fabio Walterberg Jennifer Pribble Corina Rodriguez Enriquez Louise Haagh Roberto Gargarella

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Lo Vuolo, Ruben. First Part: Citizen's Income and Cash Transfers 2. Lavinas, Lena: Brazil: the lost road to citizen's income. 3. Lo Vuolo, Ruben: The Argentine 'Universal Child Allowance' for the unemployed and informal workers 4. Arza, Camila: Basic pensions in Latin America: Towards a rights-based policy? 5. Yanes, Pablo: Targeting and conditionalities in Mexico: the end of a cash transfer model? 6. Krozer, Alice and Lo Vuolo, Ruben: A Regional Citizen's Income to Reduce Poverty in Central America. Second Part: Citizen's Income and the Latin American Public Agenda 7. Walterberg, Fabio: Are Latin Americans - Brazilians in Particular - Willing to Support an Unconditional Citizen's Income? 8. Pribble, Jennifer: The Politics of Citizen Income Programs in Latin America: Policy Legacies and Party Character. 9. Rodriguez Enriquez, Corina: Should Citizens Income become a goal for feminism in Latin America? 10. Haagh, Louise: Citizen's Income and Democratization in Latin America - A Multi-Institutional Perspective. 11. Gargarella, Roberto: Citizen's Income and the material basis of the Constitution. Epilogue 12. Lo Vuolo, Ruben.

Additional information

NPB9780230338210
9780230338210
0230338216
Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America: From Cash Transfers to Rights by Ruben Lo Vuolo
New
Hardback
Palgrave Macmillan
2012-12-28
275
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Citizen's Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America