Health Governance in the Aftermath of Traditional Corporatism: One Small Step for the Legislator, One Giant Leap for the Subsystem?(Essay)
German Policy Studies, 2009, Spring, 5, 1
-
- £2.99
-
- £2.99
Publisher Description
1 Introduction (1) Until the late 1980s outpatient care in Germany was an "ideal-type" of sectoral corporatism (Rosenbrock/Gerlinger 2006: 280). Self-governance and the dominance of large provider associations were the main characteristics of the German outpatient health care governance (Lehmbruch 1988). Public corporations in particular were able to insure privileges for their members by being involved in every decision concerning the range of benefits and prices of outpatient care.
More Books Like This
More Books by German Policy Studies
States, Markets, And Sovereign Wealth Funds.
2008
Evolving Patterns in the Police Systems of North Rhine-Westphalia, The Netherlands and England & Wales.
2009
The Police, Changing Security Arrangements and Late Modernity: The Case of the Netherlands.
2006
Republicanism and the Politics of Citizenship in Germany and France: Convergence Or Divergence?
2001
Multi-Level Governance in the European Employment and Labour Market Policy: A Conceptual Outline and Some Empirical Evidence.
2001
On the Horns of a Dilemma. The Imperative of a Grand Coalition Is Risky--Especially for the Social Democrats (Essay)
2008