Archive for the ‘Social politics part 2’ Category

The history of Economic & Social Politics in France

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Two traditions that are conflicting but have more in common than appears. These have made up the social and economic policy of the French state since the eighteenth century. The older expresses the need for centralization and control of economic and social life essential in the creation and consolidation of the modern state. The other emphasizes the objective aspect of economic laws and demands freedom for the individual. Evidnently it’s the revolution of 1789 that balances from the one to the other.
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Governing Contemporary France

Monday, May 18th, 2009

French governments have more influence over the allocation of resources to market mechanisms, but the retreat of the French state is far from complete. France still plays a large role in the distribution of employment, by means of active labor acts and policies on which over three million households depend and thrive on. France also retains power over the distribution of social assistance funds with more than ten percent of the population receiving the minimum income, and millions more are pensioners. There are also more than 1200 kinds of public aid available to start-up firms in France.
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Organization of the labour force

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Since the power now sat firmly inside Paris the big industrial corporations they saw it fit to keep wages just in line with the minimum wages set by the SMIC. As workers become organized and unions formed the inevitable changes in worker regulations began to shift when public officials and union leaders started to put their heads together. The result was a highly regulated economy in which public officials played an active role, a centralized polity that concentrated power in Paris, and a society accustomed to looking to the state to resolve its problems.
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Introduction to the French social change politics

Monday, April 13th, 2009

They key to understanding the politics of social change within France is understanding the dramatic changes that have transformed France over the past twenty-five years. The governments and economic climate of France and the rest of Europe has changed so drastically over this time that it is necessary to take all of Europe into account when discussing the political climate of France. Where as the trials of the Cold War had a big negative effect on most of Europe there is now a growing unity and prosperity with the European Union and thus all of France.
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