The Welfare Revolution of the early 20th century did not start with Clement Attlee’s Labour governments of 1945 to 1951 but had its origins in the Liberal government of forty years earlier. The British Welfare Revolution, 1906-14 offers a fresh perspective on the social reforms introduced by these Liberal governments in the years 1906 to 1914. Reforms conceived during this time created the foundations of the Welfare State and transformed modern Britain; they touched every major area of social policy, from school meals to pensions, the minimum wage to the health service.
Cooper uses an innovative approach, the concept of the Counter-Elite, to explain the emergence of the New Liberalism and examines the research that was carried out to devise ways to meet each specific social problem facing Britain in the early 20th century. For example, a group of businessmen, including Booth and Rowntree, invented the poverty survey to pinpoint those living below the poverty line and encouraged a new generation of sociologists.
This comprehensive single volume survey presents a new critical angle on the origins of the British welfare state and is an original analysis of the reforms and the leading personalities of the Liberal governments from the late Edwardian period to the advent of the First World War.
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Introduction
1. The Rise of the Counter-Elite
2. The Recruiting Grounds of the Counter-Elite
3. School Meals and Medical Inspection
4. Child Welfare
5. Old Age Pensions
6. The Webbs and the Minority Report on the Poor Law
7. The Great Budget of 1909
8. Sweating and the Minimum Wage
9. National Health Insurance
10. First Steps towards a Health Service
11. Unemployment Insurance
12. Boy Labour and Continuation Education
13. A Partially Reformed Poor Law
14. Municipal Housing and Town Planning
15. From Trade Boards to the Minimum Wage
16. Conclusion
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Cooper has made an important contribution to a well-covered field by treating the many social welfare reforms of this brief period in a single book. The chronological structure he adopts and the attention he gives the historical actors involved make this a book that general readers and undergraduates will find particularly valuable.
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The book describes and analyses the social reforms initiated by the Liberal governments of 1906-14 which produced a qualitative change in society amounting to a Welfare Revolution.
A wide-ranging series of social reforms in the Edwardian period, amounting to a Welfare Revolution, are described in an in-depth, single volume survey
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350025738
Publisert
2017-10-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
694 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
368
Forfatter