European University Institute Library

Inclusion and local community building in the context of European social policy and international human social right, Frank Schulz-Nieswandt

Label
Inclusion and local community building in the context of European social policy and international human social right, Frank Schulz-Nieswandt
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 41-53)
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Inclusion and local community building in the context of European social policy and international human social right
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
978711811
Responsibility statement
Frank Schulz-Nieswandt
Series statement
Studien zum sozialen Dasein der Person, volume 23
Summary
As a radical alternative to the cultural reality of social exclusion of the Homo patiens, inclusion is an anthropological paradigm of the philosophy of law which leads to the idea of humans going beyond social structures of centre and periphery in society. As a model of thought, inclusion is driven by the United Nations and also by the catalogue of basic social rights involved in the treaties of the European Union. We cannot understand inclusion in the same way as switching on and off a light. Beyond legal frameworks and economic incentives as important preconditions for generating social change through Pareto-optimal solutions in allocation, successful inclusion is a process of social change understood as a type of cultural transformation. As a form of metamorphosis (gestalt switch) of the collective agreement about the question of a good life, inclusion needs time, but during this time-span society has to organize social learning processes that transform the psychodynamics of individuals and the cultural grammar of exclusion. --, Provided by publisher
Content
Mapped to