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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
THE PRINCIPLE OF ‘SOLIDARITY’ IN FRANCE HAS COME TO stand for a justification of social policy in terms of the protection of mutual interests. In the literature of social policy, ‘solidarity’ refers to the establishment of collective action and recognition of mutual responsibility. The principle is often related to egalitarian policies; but the prescriptions of ‘solidarity’ may tend in a very different direction to policies which pursue equality. Equality and solidarity are not necessarily incompatible objectives, but as commonly understood, there is a tension between them which means that each might undermine the other.
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17 See Le Grand, J., The Strategy of Equality, London, Allen & Unwin, 1982 Google Scholar. Le Grand has also argued that support for the welfare state is contingent on its services to the middle classes: see Le Grand, J., ‘The Future of the Welfare State’, New Society, Vol. 68, 1984, pp. 385–6Google Scholar, and Le Grand, J. and Winter, D., The Middle Classes and the Welfare State, London, LSE Suntory Toyota International Centre for Economics and Related Disciplines, 1987 Google Scholar.
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