Major worksHis major and most influential book was titled The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism. Published in 1990, the book laid out three main types of welfare states, in which modern developed capitalist nations cluster: It is important to note that these categories have little to do with the contemporary labels of American politics, and rather have much more to do with general political theory. The traditional examples of the three types of welfare states are the United States (liberal), Germany (conservative) and Sweden (social democratic). Other sociologists and political scientists went on to apply his theoretical analysis to the real world. One such example is titled Real Worlds of Welfare Capitalism. While some critics claim Esping-Andersen's categories are becoming outdated, many political scientists are attracted by its intuitive simplicity. CriticsFirst, in empirical studies, the three typologies often cannot be distinguished. More in general, it is difficult to characterize a complex mechanism such as a 'welfare state' in one of three categories (as Esping Andersen himself acknowledges). Many welfare states have components of all typologies in the system. Second, Esping-Andersen used a statistical tool which he called a ”decommodification index" in order to illustrate the relevance of its typology. But, according a French sociologist, this index aggregates both qualitative and quantitative variables for ”sets of dimensions” which are very different and pertain to three very different areas. As we do not know the conventions used to calculate the three scores of which the index is the mean, we cannot reproduce it and test it on other dates or countries1. References
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