Inscribing Solidarity
Many governments, large institutions, and collective actors rely on the principle of solidarity to embed social policies on firm normative and legal grounds. In this original volume, a multidisciplinary roster of scholars come together to examine the contributions – and challenges – implicit in relying on the idea of solidarity to “inscribe” this principle in social policies. Chapters explore how the dependence on the solidarity principle, and especially on inclusive understandings of solidarity, can strengthen or weaken institutions and movements. The volume’s contributors cover developments across decades with a multilevel approach exploring dynamic interactions between local, national, and supranational arenas in pursuing and adjudicating the solidarity principle. Unique and innovative, Inscribing Solidarity examines the implications and dynamics of solidarity across a variety of terrains to illuminate its concrete limitations and specific advantages. This title is also available via Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Julia López López is Professor of Labor Law and Social Security Law at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona and a leading researcher of greDTiSS (UPF Research Group in Labor Law and Social Security). She has published books in Spanish and English on labor law and social security issues, most recently, Labour Agency and Governance in the 21st Century? (Hart, 2019) – as well as has numerous contributions in journals and edited books.