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Solidarity in social policy – the extent of drain risk
Abstract
Solidarity is expected to be expressed in concrete action in specific situations. In modern wel-
fare states, however, it has been made abstract in order to appeal to all citizens. Abstraction
increases the risk that solidarity is drained of its meaning. Our hypothesis is that the extent of
this risk differs between the two dominant political blocs in Sweden, the Social Democratic
and the Conservative. It is examined through an analysis of how often solidarity is invoked in
traditional newspapers representing these two blocs. When invoked in newspapers from the
Social Democratic bloc, we interpret solidarity as being “inclusive”, which is what their ideology
refers to. When invoked in newspapers from the Conservative bloc, we interpret solidarity as
“exclusionary”, which is implied in their ideology. According to our theory inclusive solidarity
is reciprocal and thereby reduces the drain risk, while exclusionary solidarity is characterized
as a one-way relationship, which increases the drain risk. The study was carried out during a
period when the government changed from Conservative to Social Democratic. According to
our hypothesis this would increase the appeal of inclusive solidarity. However, our findings
indicated the opposite, an increase in exclusionary solidarity. The conclusion is that the risk of
solidarity drain is independent of which political ideology is in power.
Link to web site
https://doi.org/10.37062/sf.61.25710
Publisher
Sveriges Sociologförbund
Citation
Sociologisk forskning, 61 (1), 65-90
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2024Author
Lundälv, Jörgen
Kihlström, Anita
Keywords
Abstract solidarity
drain risk
political blocs
traditional newspaper
Sweden
traditional newspaper
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISSN
0038-0342
Language
eng