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Comparing Parental Support in Sweden and Germany

Åsa Lundqvist, Professor at the Department of Sociology has, together with Ilona Ostner, published a comparative study on parental support ‘Parenting and parenting support in Germany and Sweden: Convergence and persistent dissimilarities’, in the Journal of Family Research.

The researchers' abstract:

Parenting support constitutes a long-established part of both the Swedish and the German portfolio of public social services. It originated in the 1920s in Germany, the 1930s in Sweden.

Support measures and underlying philosophies have steadily changed in both countries, thereafter. The 1990s saw a new ‘turn to parenting’ and also new measures in Sweden and Germany.

In this article, we ask how parenting has become recognized and re-defined as a ‘problem’ to which various actors have pinned competing policy solutions. First, we suggest that similar macro-social factors have contributed to the renewed interest in parenting and parenting support.

Second, we maintain that several elements of recent parenting support represent a profound change in the political articulation of how to support parents in their childrearing, moving both countries further in the same direction. Actors do not operate in a vacuum, though. Timing matters, too. Therefore, third, we assume dissimilarities in the focusing events (Kingdon), which typically support problem recognition and definition in a country, and also path dependent differences in the design and implementation of new measures. The overarching objective of our article is to explore the puzzle of how apparently converging trends in German and Swedish family and parenting support polices can be understood in the light of the historical and institutional differences between the two countries.

More information on content-select.com

Åsa Lundqvist's personal page