<p>Recent enlargement to the east made the European Union a more diverse social space and brought it into more direct contact with the social and cultural aftermath of communism. </p><p>Sound empirical knowledge on heterogeneity and homogeneity in European societies after the EU enlargement is lacking. By bringing together a collection of informative analyses of key domains of social life in the new member states and candidate countries, viewed in comparison both to each other and to the 'old' EU-15, this handbook will help social scientists, policy makers and other observers cope with the unfamiliarity of this new world. In particular, it examines the implications of the new member states’ membership for the future course of EU integration. This substantial text contains seventeen chapters with a focus on social conditions, such as: </p><ul> <p> </p> <li>poverty and living conditions </li> <p> </p> <li>social inclusion, life satisfaction</li> <p> </p> <li>work and labour markets;</li> <p> </p> <li>family and housing.</li> </ul><p>Making use of a range of data, this handbook will be an essential resource for undergraduate and postgraduate students and researchers of Sociology, Social Policy and Welfare, European Studies and European Union Policy. </p> <p>Editors' Introduction: The New Member States Before and After Accession <strong>Part 1: Fertility, Families and Households </strong>1. Fertility Patterns and Aspirations in Europe <em>Tony Fahey </em>2. Patterns of Family Living in Europe <em>Chiara Saraceno </em>3. Is There a Generational Cleavage in Europe? Inter-Generational Patterns in the Perception of Pensions and Elderly Care <em>Wolfgang Keck</em>, <em>Agnes Blome, and Jens Alber </em>4. Family Policies in the Enlarged European Union <em>Thomas Bahle</em> <strong>Part 2: Employment and Working Conditions </strong>5. Employment Patterns in the Enlarged European Union <em>Jens Alber </em>6. Working Conditions <em>Claire Wallace and Florian Pichler </em>7. Regulation of Labour Markets in Europe <em>Jelle Visser </em><strong>Part 3: Material Living Conditions </strong>8. Poverty and Social Exclusion in an Enlarged Europe <em>Christopher T. Whelan and Bertrand Maitre </em>9. Minimum Income Policies in Old and New Member States <em>Bea Cantillon </em>10. Housing Conditions and Their Perception: The Paradox of Housing <em>Henryk Domanski </em>11. Housing Policies and Institutional Drivers of Housing Inequalities <em>Michelle Norris </em><strong>Part 4: Social Capital and Social Cohesion</strong> 12. Patterns of Sociability in the Enlarged Europe <em>Manuela Olagnero and Paola Torrioni </em>13. Feeling Left Out: Patterns of Social Integration and Exclusion <em>Petra Böhnke </em>14. Conflicts and Threats to Social Cohesion in New and Old Member States <em>Jan Delhey and Wolfgang Keck </em><strong>Part 5: Processes of Europeanization </strong>15. Patterns of Cross-Border Migration <em>Hubert Krieger </em>16. Where we Stand in Europe: An Europeanization of Reference Groups for Social Comparisons? <em>Jan Delhey and Ulrich Kohler </em>17. Conclusions: Similarities and Differences of Living Conditions: Does Europe Grow Together? <em>The Editors </em>18. Methodological Appendix: A Quality Assessment of Different European Surveys: Towards an Open Method of Coordination for Survey Data <em>Ulrich Kohler</em> </p>
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