الجمعية الدولية للضمان الاجتماعي
دعم وتطوير الضمان الاجتماعي حول العالم.
المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الإجتماعية \مصادر \الصفحة الرئيسية
المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الإجتماعية

 

International Social Security Review

نُشرت المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الإجتماعية لأول مرة في سنة 1948، وهي نشرة يتم إصدارها بشكل رُبعي وتُعنى بحقول الضمان الإجتماعي.

تُقدم المقالات التي يتم إعدادها من قبل الخبراء حول العالم مقارنة دولية ونقاشاً مُعمقاً حول القضايا والدراسات الخاصة بأنظمة الضمان الإجتماعي في مختلف الدول. كما تتابع بانتظام المنشورات الصادرة مؤخراً بشأن الضمان الإجتماعي

النشرة متاحة في اللغات: العربية، French, Spanish  German.

 

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 معلومات عن الإشتراك:

 

تم إنشاء ركن خاص بالمنشورات الجديدة عبر الانترنت من قبل دار النشر وايلي بلاكويل، بهدف الوصول عبر الإنترنت إلى المقالات التي نشرت في المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الاجتماعية  منذ عام 1967 لكافة المشتركين.

قم بزيارة  عينة مجانية من أعداد المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الاجتماعية ، أو قم بزيارة مكتبة وايلي عبر الإنترنت لتصفح محتويات وملخصات جميع الأعداد. لمزيد من المعلومات عن كيفية الوصول للمقالات يرجى زيارة موقع مكتبتنا.

 لعرض مقال في المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الاجتماعية،  يرجى الرجوع إلى إرشادات المؤلف عبر الإنترنت

هيئة تحرير المجلة الدولية للتأمينات الاجتماعية

 يمكن للمنظمات الأعضاء في الجمعية من الوصول للعدد الحالي كاملاً  بالإضافة للأرشيف الإلكتروني للنشرة من خلال شبكة الإكسترانت

 

الإعداد الخاصة بالمجلة الدولية للتأمينات الإجتماعية باللغة العربية:

 

الإصدار العربي الحادي والعشرين لسنة 2008

1.41 MB vol60 from issues1&2&3.pdf  

 

الإصدار العربي الرابع والعشرين لسنة 2011

4.23 MB Vol 63 selected articles.pdf  

 

Current English issue: Article abstracts

Volume 65 Issue 1 (January‐March 2012)

 
The performance of social security contributory and tax‐financed pensions in Central America, and the effects of the global crisis (pp. 1 - 27)

Over the last 30 years, Latin America has pioneered structural pension reforms. This article focuses on a representative regional sample of seven Central American countries with diverse levels of development (Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama) studying contributory and tax‐financed pensions as well as recent pension reforms. It comparatively assesses system performance regarding five social security principles: unity; universal coverage; adequacy of benefits; equal treatment, solidarity and gender equality; and financial sustainability. It also evaluates the impact of the world crisis on these pension systems, highlighting the differences between public and private pensions, and extracts lessons and suggests policies for the future.

 
Health insurance system financing reforms in the Netherlands, Germany and France: Repercussions for coverage and redistribution? (pp. 29 - 51)

For a number of years, the Dutch, German and French health insurance systems have been attempting to contain costs and diversify their sources of finance, which traditionally have come mainly from social contributions. Diversification may involve broader‐based public finance, as well as greater recourse to private resources and operators. In the case of the Netherlands and Germany, the reforms go hand in hand with efforts to introduce competition between health insurance bodies. In France, private complementary insurance has become indispensable for adequate access to health care. However, these measures have repercussions for redistribution, which social assistance programmes have difficulty in addressing.

 
Semi‐conditional cash transfers in the form of family allowances for children and adolescents in the informal economy in Argentina (pp. 53 - 72)

In 2009, Argentina introduced a new transfer programme for children and adolescents younger than age 18 (Universal Child Allowance) that extended coverage under the contributory programme for family allowances to include families in the informal economy and families of unemployed persons. This article describes this innovative programme, compares it with similar programmes in Latin America and analyses its impact on coverage and its possible effects on the welfare of the population. The results indicate that the extension of access to this type of benefit has reduced considerably the coverage gap for the poor and indigent and supports efforts to consolidate the operations of different and poorly coordinated transfer programmes.

 
Testing old theories in new surroundings: The timing of first social security laws in Africa (pp. 73 - 97)

This article examines the timing of the introduction of four major social security programmes — work accident insurance, sickness benefits, pensions, and family allowances — in 43 African countries. Further, it explores whether legislative structure, dominant religion or the colonial past of the country is of importance when we control for year of independence, prosperity, degree of democracy, government stability, industrialization and the size and ethnic homogeneity of the population. On the basis of Cox hazard rate modelling it is concluded that industrialized, homogeneous and rather populous countries that were under French rule tend to be pioneers in African social security legislation.

 
The effectiveness of Luxembourg's minimum guaranteed income (pp. 99 - 116)

Using micro‐data for the year 2007, this article analyzes the effectiveness of Luxembourg's minimum guaranteed income (revenu minimum garanti — RMG) social assistance programme. First, we examine the effectiveness of the RMG by comparing the proportion of eligible households based on the different criteria for the years 2007 and 1986, and find that, in 2007, 5.5 per cent of households were eligible versus 3.75 per cent in 1986. A relaxation of the RMG's eligibility criteria implies that more low‐income households should have access to the RMG. As a second measure of programme effectiveness, the article estimates the extent of non‐takeup behaviour among those eligible for the RMG in 2007. It is found that just over 65 per cent of all households potentially entitled to the RMG do not claim. Regression analysis of the potential determinants of non‐takeup behaviour confirms the hypotheses derived from theoretical models in the literature, i.e. that rational motivation, such as the expected net utility from claiming, and stigma, play a major role in explaining levels of non‐takeup.

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