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Welfare state, unemployment, and social justice: Judgments on the rights and obligations of the unemployed

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Abstract

This article reports judgments on the rights and obligations of the unemployed in The Netherlands. A large majority of the Dutch population is shown to support (i) the unemployed’s right to social security as well as their obligation to work, (ii) the principle that declining a job offering should be punished, and (iii) harsh sanctions in some specific cases of job refusal. An emphasis on the obligation to work results from conservative attitudes regarding both distributive justice (economic conservatism) and retributive justice (cultural conservatism). Furthermore, conservative attitudes regarding distributive justice derive from a privileged economic position (especially high income and infrequent experience of unemployment), whereas conservative attitudes regarding retributive justice result from a restricted cultural position (low level of education, technical rather than cultural type of education, and limited involvement in arts and culture).

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Houtman, D. Welfare state, unemployment, and social justice: Judgments on the rights and obligations of the unemployed. Soc Just Res 10, 267–288 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02683304

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