z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Social dependents: political tale and scientific reality
Author(s) -
Alexey Simoyanov
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
nauka, kulʹtura, obŝestvo/nauka. kulʹtura. obŝestvo
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2713-0681
pISSN - 2308-829X
DOI - 10.19181/nko.2022.28.1.6
Subject(s) - politics , mythology , hegemony , political economy , state (computer science) , social order , dependency (uml) , sociology , political science , irrational number , social psychology , positive economics , social science , law , psychology , economics , history , geometry , mathematics , systems engineering , engineering , algorithm , computer science , classics
Russian society's fear of the social dependents’ hegemony is similar to an analogical fear in the political discourse of Western countries. Opponents of the concept of the social state criticize it for its tendency to multiply the masses of freeloaders. However, evidence from foreign research’s show that most of the common myths about the "class of lazybones living on welfare benefits" haven’t the factual basis. The author's discovery confirms that the problem of "social dependency" is extremely overestimate. The number of people who could be classified as social dependents is minimal, as is the damage to society from their activities. Despite this fact, right- liberal politicians use the mass dependency fear to justify the implementation of the sequestering the state's social responsibility policy and to increase hardness the order of support to the poor. If Russian society gets rid of the irrational fear of mass social dependency, it won’t become a victim of such political manipulation.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here