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Table of Contents
Intro; Contents; Acronyms; List of Figures; List of Tables; Foreword; Preface; Part I: Developmental Politics and Social Policy; Chapter 1: Introduction: Developmental Social Governance in Transition; Chapter 2: Developmental Liberalism: The Developmental State and Social Policy; 1 Introduction; 2 Debates and Research on Social Policy; 3 Historical and Political Backgrounds of Developmental Liberalism; 4 Main Sociopolitical Attributes of Developmental Liberalism; 4.1 Depoliticization/Technocratization/Developmental Obfuscation of Social Policy
4.2 Developmental Cooptation of Social Policy Constituencies4.3 State-Business Entrepreneurial Merge and Direct State Engagement in Labor Relations; 4.4 Familial Reconstitution of Social Citizenship; 4.5 Welfare Pluralism and Demobilization of Civil Society; 5 Democratic Challenges to Developmental Liberalism; 6 Conclusion; Part II: Post-Developmental Restructuring and Social Displacement; Chapter 3: Coping with the "IMF Crisis" in the Developmental Liberal Context; 1 Introduction; 2 Social Conditions of South Korean Development; 3 Economic Bubble, Psychological Bubble
4 Growth First, Distribution Later, and Structural Adjustment Now?5 Labor-Business-Government Compromise, Labor-Business Bigotry; 6 The IMF Enigma: Imperialist Finance and Local Population; 7 Recasting the State: Neoliberal Social Democracy as a South Korean Alternative?; 8 Conclusion; Appendix: "Nosajeongwiweonhoe (Labor-Business-Government Committee) Co-Declaration" of 20 January 1998; Chapter 4: Developmental Citizenry Stranded: Jobless Economic Recovery; 1 Introduction; 2 Employment as National Developmental Entitlement
3 Financial Crisis Structurally Resolved Through Proletarian Crisis: Neoliberal Developmental Statism as Long-Term Remedy4 The End of Growth-with-Equity: Bipolarization of South Korea; 5 Divided-and-Ruled: The Dilemma of Organized Labor; Chapter 5: Financialization of Poverty: Consumer Credit Instead of Social Wage?; 1 Introduction; 2 The Social Costs of Economic Crisis and Recovery: Neoliberal Interlocution; 3 Household Debt as Financialized Poverty; 4 A Developmentalist Inertia? Financialization of Poverty as Industrial Policy
5 Consumer Credit Instead of Social Wage: Inclusionary Financial Citizenship or Peripatetic Debtfarism6 Conclusion; Chapter 6: Demographic Meltdown: Familial Structural Adjustments to the Post-Developmental Impasse; 1 Introduction; 2 Developmental Liberalism, Familial Liberalism; 3 Demographic Squeeze as Self-Imposed Structural Adjustment in Social Reproduction; 4 Pronatal Welfarism and Beyond; Part III: Dual Transitions; Chapter 7: From Developmental Liberalism to Neoliberalism; 1 Introduction; 2 Neoliberalism and Counter-Democratic Renewal of Developmental Politics
3 Economic Crisis, Neoliberal Democratic Governance, and Political Obfuscation
4.2 Developmental Cooptation of Social Policy Constituencies4.3 State-Business Entrepreneurial Merge and Direct State Engagement in Labor Relations; 4.4 Familial Reconstitution of Social Citizenship; 4.5 Welfare Pluralism and Demobilization of Civil Society; 5 Democratic Challenges to Developmental Liberalism; 6 Conclusion; Part II: Post-Developmental Restructuring and Social Displacement; Chapter 3: Coping with the "IMF Crisis" in the Developmental Liberal Context; 1 Introduction; 2 Social Conditions of South Korean Development; 3 Economic Bubble, Psychological Bubble
4 Growth First, Distribution Later, and Structural Adjustment Now?5 Labor-Business-Government Compromise, Labor-Business Bigotry; 6 The IMF Enigma: Imperialist Finance and Local Population; 7 Recasting the State: Neoliberal Social Democracy as a South Korean Alternative?; 8 Conclusion; Appendix: "Nosajeongwiweonhoe (Labor-Business-Government Committee) Co-Declaration" of 20 January 1998; Chapter 4: Developmental Citizenry Stranded: Jobless Economic Recovery; 1 Introduction; 2 Employment as National Developmental Entitlement
3 Financial Crisis Structurally Resolved Through Proletarian Crisis: Neoliberal Developmental Statism as Long-Term Remedy4 The End of Growth-with-Equity: Bipolarization of South Korea; 5 Divided-and-Ruled: The Dilemma of Organized Labor; Chapter 5: Financialization of Poverty: Consumer Credit Instead of Social Wage?; 1 Introduction; 2 The Social Costs of Economic Crisis and Recovery: Neoliberal Interlocution; 3 Household Debt as Financialized Poverty; 4 A Developmentalist Inertia? Financialization of Poverty as Industrial Policy
5 Consumer Credit Instead of Social Wage: Inclusionary Financial Citizenship or Peripatetic Debtfarism6 Conclusion; Chapter 6: Demographic Meltdown: Familial Structural Adjustments to the Post-Developmental Impasse; 1 Introduction; 2 Developmental Liberalism, Familial Liberalism; 3 Demographic Squeeze as Self-Imposed Structural Adjustment in Social Reproduction; 4 Pronatal Welfarism and Beyond; Part III: Dual Transitions; Chapter 7: From Developmental Liberalism to Neoliberalism; 1 Introduction; 2 Neoliberalism and Counter-Democratic Renewal of Developmental Politics
3 Economic Crisis, Neoliberal Democratic Governance, and Political Obfuscation