States, social knowledge, and the origins of modern social policies /

From the 1850s to the 1920s, laws regulating the industrial labor process, pensions for the elderly, unemployment insurance, and measures to educate and ensure the welfare of children were enacted in many industrializing capitalist nations. This same period saw the development of modern social scien...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors / Creators:Rueschemeyer, Dietrich.
Skocpol, Theda.
Format: eBook Electronic
Language:English
Imprint: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press ; New York : Russell Sage Foundation, ©1996.
Series:Princeton legacy library.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click here for full text at Project MUSE
Table of Contents:
  • Knowledge about what? Policy intellectuals and the new liberalism / Ira Katznelson
  • Social knowledge, social risk, and the politics of industrial accidents in Germany and France / Anson Rabinbach
  • Social science and the building of the early welfare state: toward a comparison of statist and non-statist western societies / Björn Wittrock and Peter Wagner
  • The Verein für Sozialpolitik and the Fabian Society: a study in the sociology of policy-relevant knowledge / Dietrich Rueschemeyer and Ronan van Rossem
  • Progressive reformers, unemployment, and the transformation of social inquiry in Britain and the United States, 1880s-1920s / Libby Schweber
  • Social knowledge and the generation of child welfare policy in the United States and Canada / John R. Sutton
  • International modeling, states, and statistics: Scandinavian social security solutions in the 1890s / Stein Kuhnle
  • Social knowledge and the state in the industrial relations of Japan (1882-1940) and Great Britain (1870-1914) / Sheldon Garon.