Fr. 168.00

Social Security Law in Small Jurisdictions

English · Hardback

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Description

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The book examines whether small jurisdictions (states) are confronted with specific issues providing social security and how to deal with these issues. How is social security law impacted by the smallness of the jurisdiction? First, the author examines the key concepts 'small jurisdiction' and 'social security' as he understands them in the present research. He then pays some attention to the relation between social security and social security law and subsequently makes an excursion to explore the notion of legal transplants. In the second part, the author first examines the main features characterizing small states according to the general literature on small states, focusing on features which may be relevant to social security. He also includes an overview of the (limited) literature dealing with the specific social security issues small jurisdictions have to deal with. In other words, the second part provides the reader with the status quaestionis. In the third part, the author takes a look at the social security systems of 20 selected small jurisdictions. He does so according to a uniform scheme, in order to facilitate their comparison. These 20 case studies allow him in a next part to test the correctness of the statements made in Part 2. In the fourth part, he compares the social security systems of the 20 small jurisdictions. He draws conclusions as to the main question, but also to test the validity of the current literature on the topic as described in Part 2. Special attention goes to the use of legal transplants for the definition of the personal scope of social security arrangements. In the concluding part of the book, the author formulates some suggestions for the benefit of the social security systems of the small jurisdictions, based on his research.

List of contents

Part i.- Conceptual Framework.- Small Jurisdictions; Their Common Features, In General and as far as Social Security is Concerned.- Part ii. Country Studies: Social Security in Twenty Small Jurisdictions.- Aruba.- Buthan.- Curaçao. - Cyprus.- Faroe Islands.- Fiji.- Gibraltar.- Greenland.- Grenada.- Guyana.- Iceland.- Liechtenstein.- Maldives.- Malta.- San Malta.-  San Marino.- Seychelles.- Sint Maarten.- Suriname.- Trinidad and Tobago.- Tonga.-Part iii.- The Comparison.- Twenty-One Recommendations.- Epilogue.

About the author










Danny Pieters is a full professor at KU Leuven (Belgium). He holds the chair of Social Security Law and the chair of Comparative Law at the KU Leuven Law School. He is head of the Research Unit Europe and Social Security (RUESS) and programme director of the European Master Social Security. Danny is the founder and current director of the Small Jurisdictions Research Group. He served also as Member of the Belgian Federal Parliament (including as the President of the Senate in 2010/2011) and as vice rector of KU Leuven. Since 2021 he is judge in the Belgian Constitutional Court.

Report

"The book remains an important contribution that will act as a key reference point for both researchers and policy-makers interested in social security provision in small jurisdictions. There is the future potential-based on this work" (Jed Meers, Journal of Social Security Law, Vol. 30 (3), 2023)

Product details

Authors Danny Pieters
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 11.12.2021
 
EAN 9783030782467
ISBN 978-3-0-3078246-7
No. of pages 324
Dimensions 155 mm x 23 mm x 235 mm
Illustrations XVI, 324 p. 1 illus.
Series The World of Small States
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Law > International law, foreign law

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