Jan Petersson
Lund University
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European Journal of Social Work | 1998
Sune Sunesson; Staffan Blomberg; Per Gunnar Edebalk; Lars Harrysson; Jan Magnusson; Anna Meeuwisse; Jan Petersson; Tapio Salonen
Abstract Up to the beginning of the 1990s Sweden had been considered a paragon welfare state in its realisation of universalist principles and an institutional welfare model. This seems to be changing rapidly. Mass unemployment, welfare expenditure cuts and institutional transformation have introduced several selective mechanisms into the Swedish welfare system, adding up to a retreat from universalism. New forms of selectivity can be seen in all layers of the welfare system, both transfer benefits and social security, public personal social services and the relation between state and voluntary organisations. The shifting of burdens from universal social security and insurance-based welfare onto local means tested systems has already meant a restigmatisation of unemployment, as the unemployed lose eligibility for the insurance-based systems, and an increase in the proportion of people who have to rely on poor relief instead of rights-based welfare, and when unemployment has gone up, so have work requireme...
European Journal of Social Work | 2000
Staffan Blomberg; Per Gunnar Edebalk; Jan Petersson
In Sweden, clear changes in the care of the elderly have occurred during the 1990s, with fewer people being provided public care, although greater efforts are now directed towards those most in need of help. Elderly people are cared for increasingly in other ways: by the family, by means of market-provided care, and by voluntary and informal means. Differences between municipalities are considerable. A comparative study was conducted in eight Swedish municipalities, four of them characterized by extensive reorganization of home-help services, and the other four constituting a reference group where such changes had not occurred. The aim was to examine processes of setting local priorities and adjustments in a period of marked structural change. Interviews with local politicians, administrators, professionals, and union representatives, and with the elderly themselves, were the main sources of data. The process of determining the extent and content of home care services in the municipalities was found to be a complex process, one involving a number of partly interdependent factors. Restructuring was found to be greatest in the context of a traditionally strong reliance on home-help services, rather than in the context of institutionalized care, where administrative decision-making and a medical and rehabilitative perspective dominated.
Experimental Aging Research | 1999
Lena Edén; Göran Ejlertsson; Jan Petersson
Explanatory variables concerning poor quality of life (QL) were established among disability pensioners with musculoskeletal disorders and a control group. In both groups health status, leisure time activities, and social network were important for QL. Among the retirees immigration, employment before retirement and a negative attitude to the disability pension were related to poor QL.
Socialt arbete : en grundbok (2. uppl.); (2006) | 2006
Jan Petersson; Staffan Blomberg
Social Work Education | 2004
Sigrún Júlíusdóttir; Jan Petersson
Archive | 1987
Jan Petersson
International Journal of Social Welfare | 2010
Ulrika Järkestig Berggren; Staffan Blomberg; Jan Petersson
Work-a Journal of Prevention Assessment & Rehabilitation | 2006
Lena Edén; Ingemar Andersson; Göran Ejlertsson; Britt Inger Ekström; Yvonne Johansson; Ido Leden; Jan Petersson
Socialvetenskaplig tidskrift; (4), pp 303-318 (2003) | 2003
Staffan Blomberg; Jan Petersson
Social welfare, Social exclusion A life course frame; (2007) | 2007
Jan Petersson; Staffan Blomberg