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Résister !

De l'adaptation à la dissidence en terrains criminologiques
Première édition

Évaluer, expertiser, standardiser, normaliser ; autant d'injonctions qui infiltrent depuis plusieurs décennies les terrains hétéroclites intéressant la criminologie dans le cadre d'un mouvement plus global de managérialisation de la fonction publique. Lire la suite

Face à celui-ci, on observe de multiples formes d'adaptations, d'aménagements, de contournements, de bricolages, d’instrumentalisations, voire, plus rarement, d’oppositions directes.

En s’appuyant essentiellement sur des travaux empiriques, une vingtaine de chercheur·es mettent en lumière comment des professionnel·les du champ criminologique, mais également des membres de la société civile, « résistent » concrètement aux nouvelles logiques gestionnaires et invitent les lecteurs et lectrices à poser leur regard sur la créativité et l’ingéniosité que déploient les personnes concernées.

Ce livre est une invitation au voyage, par des chemins divers, parfois de traverse, en hommage à Christophe Adam, ami et collègue de l’Université libre de Bruxelles.


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Spécifications


Éditeur
Éditions de l'Université de Bruxelles
Auteur
Valérie Caprasse, Nelson Das Neves Ribeiro, Dominique De Fraene, Luce Molitor, Sybille Smeets,
Contributions de
Flore Belenger, Valérie Caprasse, Laurent Chabert, Nelson Das Neves Ribeiro, Dominique De Fraene, Marie-Sophie Devresse, Mathilde Du Jardin, Jérôme Englebert, Jessica Filippi, Olivier Huybrechts, Dan Kaminski, Michel Kokoreff, Anne Lemonne, Valentine Mahieu, Christophe Mincke, Luce Molitor, Carla Nagels, Magali Ravit, David Scheer, Sybille Smeets, Carrol Tange,
Réalisateur
Sybille Smeets,
Collection
Droit & Criminologie | n° 4
ISSN
27958493
Langue
français
BISAC Subject Heading
LAW000000 LAW > LAW026000 LAW / Criminal Law
BIC subject category (UK)
L Law > LAR Criminology: legal aspects > LAQ Law & society
Code publique Onix
06 Professionnel et académique
CLIL (Version 2013-2019 )
3259 DROIT
Date de première publication du titre
03 octobre 2024
Type d'ouvrage
Monographie
Avec
Bibliographie

Paperback


Date de publication
28 novembre 2016
ISBN-13
978-2-8004-1611-3
Ampleur
Nombre de pages de contenu principal : 240
Code interne
1611
Format
160 x 240 x 15 cm
Poids
397 grammes
ONIX XML
Version 2.1, Version 3

ePub


Date de publication
03 mai 2019
ISBN-13
978-2-8004-1666-3
Contenu du produit
Text (eye-readable)
Ampleur
Nombre de pages de contenu principal : 240
Code interne
1666
Epub-Édition accessible
Table of contents navigation
ONIX XML
Version 2.1, Version 3

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Sommaire


 

List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
1.1 Case Selection and Structure of the Book
1.2 Institutional Regimes and Agency in a Bismarckian Healthcare System
      1.2.1 Building Welfare Institutions and Healthcare Systems
      1.2.2 Welfare States as Institutional Regimes
      1.2.3 Bismarckian Welfare Regimes and Healthcare Systems
      1.2.4 Actors' Interests in a Bismarckian Healthcare Systems
1.3 National Actors’ Usages of Europe
2. Dynamics in the Austrian Healthcare System: History, Governance, Funding, and Provision
2.1 The Historical Development of the Austrian Welfare State and Healthcare System
      2.1.1 The Creation of Social Insurance under the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1880s-1918)
      2.1.2 Social Insurance and Change(s) of the Political Regime (1918-1945)
               2.1.2.1 The First Republic (1918-1934)
               2.1.2.2 The Corporative State (Ständestaat) and Nazi Occupation (1934-1945)
      2.1.3 Consolidation of the Welfare State in the Second Republic (1945-1980s)
               2.1.3.1 Political Consolidation and the Role of Political Parties
               2.1.3.2 Social Partnership
               2.1.3.3 The General Social Security Act: Centralisation and Expansion
                           of the Austrian Welfare State
               2.1.3.4 The Welfare State and the Kreisky Era (1970-1983)
               2.1.3.5 15a Agreements: Cooperative Federalism in Healthcare since the 1970s
      2.1.4 Austria and Initial Reforms of the Welfare State (1983-1995)
      2.1.5 Adaptations to Europe and Welfare State Reforms (1995-1999)
               2.1.5.1 EU Membership and Welfare State Reforms
               2.1.5.2 Europeanization Effects
      2.1.6 Austerity and Reforms of the Welfare State during the 2000s
      2.1.7 Interim Conclusion: the Different Phases of Welfare State Development
2.2 Austrian Healthcare Governance: a Complex and Fragmented System
      2.2.1 Main Actors in Healthcare Governance
      2.2.2 Inert Structures and Practices: Path-dependent Governance Reforms
2.3 The Financing Structure of Austrian Healthcare
      2.3.1 Financial Flows and Actors’ Interests in the Healthcare System
      2.3.2 The Financial Interplay between the National and the Regional
                Level in Inpatient Care
2.4 The Provision of Healthcare in Austria
      2.4.1 The Structure of Healthcare Provision
      2.4.2 Interim Conclusion: Institutional Dynamics, Actors’ Practices and
               Cross-border Healthcare
3. European Integration and Cross-border Healthcare
3.1 European Limits to Member States’ Social Sovereignty
3.2 European Integration and Healthcare
3.3 The EU as a Quasi-Federal Opportunity Structure in Healthcare
3.4 Cross-border Patient Mobility in Austria
4. Usages of Europe in the Austrian Healthcare System
4.1 Challenging Boundaries? Cross-border Hospital Collaboration and Regional Experiences
      4.1.1 Cross-border Collaboration between Austria and Germany
      4.1.2 Cross-border Collaboration between Austria and the Czech Republic
      4.1.3 Lower Austrian Usages of Europe at European Level
      4.1.4 Cross-border Healthcare: More of a Burden than an Opportunity for Regions?
      4.1.5 Discussion: Regional Usages of Europe and Cross-border Healthcare
4.2 Usages of Europe by Corporate Actors
      4.2.1 Payers: Perception and Management of Cross-border Healthcare
      4.2.2 Payers’ Usages of Europe
      4.2.3 Providers: the Medical Profession and Cross-border Healthcare
      4.2.4 Providers’ Usages of Europe at National and European Level
      4.2.5 Discussion: Usages of Europe by Corporate Actors
4.3 Interim Conclusion: Usages of Europe and National Boundaries
5. Conclusion
References
Primary Sources
        Official and Public Documents
        Newspaper Articles
Secondary Sources
        Analytical Reports, Working Papers, Conference Papers
        Articles
        Books and Book Chapters
List of interviews

Extrait


Introduction