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. National Contextual Factors and Public Support for European Integration. European Union Politics 6 ( 2 ): 155 – 180 . Falkner , G. ( 2008 ): Social Policy . In: Graziano
. An Economic Explanation of Strain Falusné, Sz. K. (2004): Az EU szociálpolitikája és Magyarország [Social Policy of the EU and Hungary]. In: Fejlesztés és Finanszírozás
. Gyáni , Gábor 1994 A szociálpolitika múltja Magyarországon [The Past of Social Policy in Hungary] . História Könyvtár 4 . Budapest : MTA Történettudományi Intézet . Gyáni , Gábor – Kövér , György 1998 Magyarország társadalomtörténete a
1 Introduction Social policies are a set of complementary public policies aimed at ensuring social protection and welfare as a moral and political requirement. They also function as an economic necessity, providing more social cohesion and
connection between the neoliberal agenda and K-12 education 4 in light of legislation and social policy. The aim of this paper is to highlight the socio-political and social consequences of the legislative changes in public
Even though the economic model is linked to social values, 3 EU social policy lacks a solid backbone of legally binding norms. 4 Taken together with the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the
and 1.5 million baby layettes. ( Bársony Elemér hozzászólása a közgyűlésen szociálpolitikai ügyekben [Elemér Bársony's Contribution to the Assembly on Matters of Social Policy]. Fővárosi Közlöny , March 31, 1922, 918–919.) 47 Pedlow kapitány
Information Society carried out by the Department of Sociology and Social Policy of the Budapest University of Economic Sciences and Public Administration (now Corvinus University of Budapest). Manuscript. GFK (2002): Online media
specialised in labour market and social policy issues. Although, as its title suggests, the project focused on the take-up of services and benefits by workers from the Central and Eastern Europe EU member states, in this article some key labour market
Europe is not only the land of origin, but also the principal keeper of social rights, since it is associated with the concept of Europeanism. The obvious social restrictions in Hungary as well as in other countries of Europe in recent years make it absolutely reasonable to examine to what social-economic context the discernible withdrawal of welfare services provided by the state is attributable. The similar manifestations are supported by no means by the same system of social conditions. As to its basis and dating back to its historical origin, the current social policy of the EU is framed in the spirit of the conceptual system of the social state. The Fundamental Rights Charter (just as the “European Constitution Treaty”, as part of which it may become mandatory) does not reflect either the labour society or Europe of the peoples, but the conceptions of the capital, of political classes and eurocracy. Nevertheless: considering the power relations of global capitalism, we need to appreciate as an apparent actuality that in the midst of these relations the charter insists not only on the requirement of European unity, but also on a modernised version of the social conceptual system. The purpose of this treatise has been to highlight that social objectives cannot be treated as isolated from their economic and social context. We should not risk balance by the maintenance and preservation of a social-organisational framework via overspending, which altogether contradicts the possibility of development and the sustainability of equilibrated development.