Your Search Results(showing 5)

    • Social security & welfare lawx
    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      April 2017

      Pauper policies

      Poor law practice in England, 1780–1850

      by Samantha A. Shave

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      November 2018

      Pauper policies

      Poor law practice in England, 1780–1850

      by Samantha A. Shave

      Pauper policies examines how policies under the old and New Poor Laws were conceived, adopted, implemented, developed or abandoned. This fresh perspective reveals significant aspects of poor law history which have been overlooked by scholars. Important new research is presented on the adoption and implementation of 'enabling acts' at the end of the old poor laws; the exchange of knowledge about how best to provide poor relief in the final decades of the old poor law and formative decades of the New; and the impact of national scandals on policy-making in the new Victorian system. Pointing towards a new direction in the study of poor law administration, it examines how people, both those in positions of power and the poor, could shape pauper policies. It is essential reading for anyone with an interest in welfare and poverty in eighteenth and nineteenth-century England.

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      April 2024

      Ideas of poverty in the Age of Enlightenment

      by Niall O’Flaherty, Robin Mills

      This collection of essays examines the ways in which poverty was conceptualised in the social, political, and religious discourses of eighteenth-century Europe. It brings together experts with a wide range of expertise to offer pathbreaking discussions of how eighteenth-century thinkers thought about the poor. Because the theme of poverty played important roles in many critical issues in European history, it was central to some of the key debates in Enlightenment political thought throughout the period, including the controversies about sovereignty and representation, public and private charity, as well as questions relating to crime and punishment. The book examines some of the most important contributions to these debates, while also ranging beyond the canonical Enlightenment thinkers, to investigate how poverty was conceptualised in the wider intellectual culture, as politicians, administrators and pamphlet writers grappled with the issue.

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