
Security: A General Principle of Social Security Law in Europe
A General Principle of Social Security Law in Europe
Europa Law Publishing
Published in June 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
649 pages
978-90-8952-063-0 (ISBN)
Description
Social security systems are experiencing a profound change all over Europe, due to internal as well as to external reasons: changes in society, in the labour markets and globalisation. The normative dimension of these changes is often overlooked.
This book takes the first step in filling the gap, concentrating on security as a general principle of European social security law (GPSoc), explaining what this principle means and how it works. It reflects the way in which legal comparison can be used to gain a better understanding of social security law. It brings together detailed reports from 14 European countries. And it analyses the effects of security on legislative, as well as on administrative, action.
By so doing, it not only provides detailed information about the institutions and the instruments through which social security works in practice, but also offers a better understanding of its normative basis. This basis is fundamental: It explains the role which social security plays in modern societies, since it is, after all, a core element of the nation state which holds these societies together in times in which they can no longer be based on religion or social class.
This book takes the first step in filling the gap, concentrating on security as a general principle of European social security law (GPSoc), explaining what this principle means and how it works. It reflects the way in which legal comparison can be used to gain a better understanding of social security law. It brings together detailed reports from 14 European countries. And it analyses the effects of security on legislative, as well as on administrative, action.
By so doing, it not only provides detailed information about the institutions and the instruments through which social security works in practice, but also offers a better understanding of its normative basis. This basis is fundamental: It explains the role which social security plays in modern societies, since it is, after all, a core element of the nation state which holds these societies together in times in which they can no longer be based on religion or social class.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Groningen
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 24 cm
Width: 16 cm
ISBN-13
978-90-8952-063-0 (9789089520630)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
The editors are well-known, experienced specialists in social security law.
Ulrich Becker is the director of the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Social Law in Munich and Professor at the Ludwigs-Maximilians-University in Munich; Danny Pieters is Secretary-General of the European Institute of Social Security and Chair of Social Security Law at the University of Leuven; Friso Ross is Professor of Law, Faculty of Social Work, at the Erfurt University of Applied Sciences; Paul Schoukens is Professor of Social Security Law at the University of Leuven.
Ulrich Becker is the director of the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Social Law in Munich and Professor at the Ludwigs-Maximilians-University in Munich; Danny Pieters is Secretary-General of the European Institute of Social Security and Chair of Social Security Law at the University of Leuven; Friso Ross is Professor of Law, Faculty of Social Work, at the Erfurt University of Applied Sciences; Paul Schoukens is Professor of Social Security Law at the University of Leuven.