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Studying Social Welfare and Policy Assignment
Studying, Social, Welfare, Policy, Assignment
Chapter One
What is Social Work
Questions that most people have regarding social work are the following: Just what is
social work? What does it mean to be a social worker? What are social workers trying to
accomplish?
Social workers have many different types of jobs that help people and communities. The
following is a typical list of things social workers do. Leon Ginsberg (1998) wrote a great
book on Careers in Social Work. In Ginsberg book the author lists some of the jobs for
social workers. They are as follows:
1. Working in Government Agencies such as Jobs and Family Services.
2. Working in Mental Health areas such counseling.
3. Working in the Health field such as hospitals and nursing homes.
4. Working in Children Services such as foster care, adoptions, and children's homes.
5. Working in Adult and Juvenile Detention centers and in probation departments.
6. Advocating for social policy at the government level, local, state and federal.
Social work is a practice profession meaning that it is typically a hands-on profession. It
is not sociology, psychology or Psychiatry. But social work does use the scientific
information gathered by Sociologists, Psychologists and Psychiatrists to help individuals
whatever the problem may be. A social worker is professionally educated and trained to
help people who live in a state of stress, who are disadvantaged, disabled, abused, or
have mental conditions (Ginsberg, 1998).
The goal is to hopefully help someone to become more emotional and psychologically
stable after seeing a social worker or just helping a person solve a problem. There is a
specific methodology that social workers are trained to use based on scientific
knowledge. It is called the generalist practice of social work.
The authors Cox, Tice and Long (2019) state in their book titled: “Introduction to Social
Work” that social work is a profession because it requires specialized, formal training
and certification.” To be considered a social worker one needs at least a bachelor’s
degree and, in some states, a master’s degree (MSW). Individuals can work assisting
social workers with an associate degree.
Social work degree programs are regulated by state licensing boards. Many Colleges
and Universities for Bachelor and Master’s degree programs should adhere to the
standards for social work illustrated by CSWE the Counsel on Social Work Education.
This accreditation body makes sure that a college or university meets universal
standards across the board regarding Generalist Social Work Practice.
There are nine major Social Work Competencies put forwarded by CSWE for all
bachelor’s degree programs. Cox, Tice and Long (2019) summarizes these
Competencies and they are as follows:
1. Demonstrate ethical and professional behavior
2. Engage in diversity and difference in practice
3. Advance human rights and social, economic and environmental justices
4. Engage in practice-informed research and research-informed practice
5. Engage in policy practice
6. Engage with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities
7. Assess with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities
8. Intervene with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities
9. Evaluate practice with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.
All these expectations are met within a degree program. Students usually take courses
in Social Welfare, Research methodology, Human Behavior and the social environment,
Sociology, Psychology, Race and Ethnicity, Ethics and many other related fields of
study.
Summary
Social work is a helping profession. There are high standards and expectations of
training put forward by the Council on Social Work Education. Social Workers work in
variety of settings. To be a social worker one needs at least a bachelor’s degree. One
can work as an assistant to a social worker with an associate degree.
Chapter Two
The beginnings of Social Work
Social work came about because human needs could not always be met by the
individual. Human needs generally include the following:
1. Must have food to survive
2. Clothing to keep warm in the winter
3. Shelter from the environmental elements
4. A safe environment to live
5. Healthy emotional relationships. Research indicates that children who do not receive
love from their parents have lower levels of self-esteem and have a hard time
demonstrating emotion to someone else later in life.
6. Having the opportunity to develop whatever innate characteristics exist. To make use
of whatever one is born with. Without effective socialization more problems exist for the
individual in terms of mental health, health in general and lower levels of self-esteem.
As a result of these needs there has been an ongoing debate as to what is the best way
to address these needs that people have. The two extremes are 1. Having the
government do everything and 2. Having individuals fend for themselves. Most societies
have a combination of these two ideologies in place. But the argument as to what
degree goes back centuries.
In the United States the philosophy of rugged individualism has been a powerful
philosophy since colonial times. Emile Durkheim a famous classical sociologist of the
19th century in France used this term to describe certain societies. The philosophy is
that everyone is on their own. It is a survival of the fittest position.
The United States had historically advocated that the individual is responsible for their
life situation. The other side of the argument is that not everyone has the same
opportunity regarding their start in life. Some people are born with an advantage and
some with a disadvantage. So, the question becomes who will help those who need
help. There have been numerous methodologies utilized by societies to help people.
They are as follows:
1. Mutual Aid: This probably is the oldest form of help. This is simply people helping
people. Children taking care of their parents for example. Neighbors helping each other.
Self-help groups also fit this category. This is okay until the problem becomes too
massive. In modern times people do not have the time or the skills necessary to do all
of this. But it is a method used and advocated by certain groups in society.
2. Charity-Philanthropy: This is when rich people and/or organizations who have money
donate this money to help those in need. Many schools, orphanages, hospitals, and
nursing homes were built with private donations. This will be discussed later but two
organizations that emerge from the Charity-Philanthropy movement after the breakup of
feudalism were the Charity Organization Societies and the settlement housing
movement.
The Charity Organization Societies had individuals who worked for them known as the
friendly visitors. These visitors were mostly women who had money who would visit
poor people and advise them on living. These women tried to get the poor people to
have the same values as them. The friendly visitors were really some of the first social
workers. Many people believed that the problem with poor people was their immorality
and all the friendly visitors had to do was change the morality of the poor person.
The settlement housing movement rested on the belief that if the rich people or at least
some of them would just move into poor areas that poor people would see how the rich
lived and this would change the neighborhood. These people believed the environment
played a big role in how people turned out. They wanted scientific research to support
whatever decisions they made in reshaping the environment to help people.
Thus, the beginnings of using the findings of sociology to implement change. Relying on
science is a good thing but the difficulty with this movement is that the problem is so big
that there is not a big enough pot of money or willing contributors to help out although
social workers will take whatever is available to help people.
3. Public Welfare: This system goes all the way back to the English Poor Law of 1601
which we will discuss later. But public welfare started out with indoor relief that is
providing care within institutions. This was extremely popular in the 17 and 18th century.
This was done primarily at the local and state level until 1935 when major changes in
the role of the federal government occurred.
4. Social Insurance: This is a category where taxes are collected from individuals
(employees) and employers to finance government sponsored programs. Medicare,
Workman’s Compensation, unemployment benefits, and Social Security fit this
category. Many European countries had programs like this way sooner than the United
States.
5. Social Services: This is a type of social work in which the social worker offers advice
maybe in the terms of counseling if one has the license or providing information that the
public needs such as public service announcements, family planning information, and
even educational advice.
6. Universal Provision: The United States due to rugged individualism does not do this
for many types of services. This is a provision in which services go to everyone such as
the Center for disease information. People who advocate for a basic check of money to
go to every individual would fit this category. Family allowances is what some countries
provide. But again, with the rugged individualism this has never been popular in the
United States.
Summary
The beginnings of social work were discussed including a discussion on the charity-
philanthropy movement and the settlement housing movement. The six types of help
were discussed in trying to address individual needs.
Chapter Three
History of Welfare during Colonial Times
England passed the English Poor Law in 1601. People were moving into cities and they
were poor, so poverty became more visible. There was not a large middle class as there
is today. Middle class today is around 40 to 45 % of the population in the United States.
In 1601 the middle class was only a small percentage of the population. You basically
had the rich which was no more than 8 percent of the population and just about
everyone else was poor.
Political leaders became genuinely concerned with the migration of poor people coming
into the cities. Therefore, the political leaders felt they had to do something. It was okay
when poverty was not that visible but now that was all changing with city life emerging.
So, England passed the English Poor Law of 1601 which made each city or village
responsible for the poor and the elderly in their city or village. There was no role played
by the federal government. The federal government did not collect taxes for this law.
The English Poor Law of 1601 created the following regulations:
1. Justices in each parish at the local level were to appoint guardian's over poor people.
These justices would monitor the poor including where the poor could locate.
2. Every person who was able to work would be required to work.
3. Every person who owned a house would be locally taxed in order to pay for the
provisions of the law.
4. If local funds could not meet the demands of the law, the justices had the power to
get funds from other parishes if they had the money.
5. Those in charge of the poor would be appointed by the justices. Those in charge
could commit poor children to be apprentices to learn a trade. A female child could be
legally bound to the age of 21 and a man could be bound until the age of 24. A question
that arose then and today is: Should the government, local or federal, have the power to
remove poor children from a parent’s home and force them to work? Should the
government have the power to force people to work or relocate if necessary?
6. If land were considered not valuable by the local government, then the local
government could erect houses on that land for poor workers.
7. Families were required by law to take care of parents and grandparents. This is
before nursing homes.
These laws set in motion a philosophy of helping people less fortunate either by local
government or the federal government that has been debated for 400 years. The
question becomes: Who is responsible for being poor and who is responsible for helping
the poor? Is it the individual’s fault or society's fault for being poor or a combination of
both?
During colonial times in the United States the colonies brought with them the English
Poor Law philosophy. The ideology of rugged individualism is at play here. Local
government got involved in dealing with poor people only because poor people were
getting in the way. From colonial times to the 1930’s the federal government was pretty
much out of the process of helping poor people.
The following discussion on welfare in Colonial America will be taken from the book
titled: From Poor Law to Welfare State by Walter I. Trattner (1999). Once people arrived
here from Europe, they found out that life was extremely hard. Many were living in
poverty. Each colony had deal with the widespread poverty. Again, there was no middle
class, just rich and poor for the most part. People had to deal with the sick, the mentally
ill, the blind, the elderly and poor people. The problem was massive. To deal with the
problem the colonists brought the English Poor Law with them.
In fact, the colonies followed the English Poor law. Many levied local taxes to have
funds to deal with the poor people. Families were required to take care of their own.
When one could not be taken care of by the family then these individuals would be put
in a private home in which those individuals would be paid. Sometimes the poor person
would be auctioned off to somebody. Many times, local doctors would be paid by the
town or parish to treat poor people.
Poor people if they did not have residency, could be expelled from that area or city. In
many cases one had to be in an area for five years to be considered a resident. If you
were poor and you chose not to work in the colonies you could be beaten or thrown in
jail (Trattner, 1999).
For the Native Americans there really was no help. The Native Americans were forced
to live on terrible land. If they were on a reservation, then the ruler of the reservation
was usually corrupt. Blacks were viewed as children of Satan not entitled to the same
rights as white people so even the poor laws did not apply to them (Trattner 1999). For
those who were mentally ill there were no institutions to help during colonial times.
Children could be forced to work as an apprentice and were not paid.
Conclusion
In summary, being poor in colonial times was difficult not that it is not difficult now. But
the English Poor Law of 1601 was an attempt to do something about the poor people
perhaps not so much out of concern for the poor but for the reason to keep them from
just begging and hanging out on the street. The poor had to do something. And they
could not just move around from community to community due to the residency
requirement.
Chapter Four
Colonial Life Continued
The following material is taken from the book titled: From Poor Law to Welfare State by
Walter I. Trattner 1999. During the time period of the American Revolution there were
many poor immigrants. There were many poor widows and orphans. Life expectancy
was only in the 40’s. There was an increasing number of children being born out of
wedlock. One-third to one-half of all recorded births were out of wedlock. The economy
was terrible during the time of the American Revolution as well. There was illness and
diseases such typhoid, malaria, scarlet fever, diphtheria, smallpox, measles and others.
There was no cure for these. Funding to help these poor people came from local
government only. It took up anywhere from 10 to 35 percent of their budgets (Trattner
1999, p. 31). Welfare was done only at the local level and by private charity. But the
problem was massive, and the help could not cover the problem. Even George
Washington who was imperfect stated the following in a letter: “Let the hospitality of the
house, with respect to the poor, be kept up.
Let no one go away hungry. If any of this kind of people (poor people) shall be in
want…supply their necessities…; and I have no objection to your giving my money in
charity to the amount of forty or fifty pounds a year…What I mean by having no
objection is that is my desire that it should be done (Trattner 1999, P. 33).” There were
people trying to help. Poverty played a role in the logic of having an American
Revolution.
Various religious denominations tried to help as well. The Quakers spent a lot of money
helping poor people. Social Welfare was a joint effort of local governments and private
groups during the colonial period. Religion played a major role in people feeling they
had a moral obligation to help people in need.
The Great Awakening movement in the 1700s, which was a religious revival
movement, promoted individual responsibility but also promoted those who had the
wealth to help those in need. One of the leading figures was George Whitefield who
advocated giving to the poor. Benjamin Franklin even spoke about George Whitefield
and gave money after listening to Whitefield speak.
Then came the Enlightenment movement during these colonial times. The
Enlightenment movement emphasized the use of reason to comprehend anything.
Religion to the strict followers of the Enlightenment was not necessary. The
Enlightenment movement emphasized science to deal with poverty.
Those who were calling for an American Revolution tapped into the resentment poor
people had toward England. The use of reason was emphasized that a new society
could solve the problems of poverty. But the revolution did not solve the poverty
problem. The use of the Poor laws was abandoned for the most part. States began
assuming more responsibility for the poor but nothing at the national level yet. The
National Government did not really get involved until the 1930’s and has been involved
ever since.
The United States after the revolution did not have a national policy on how to deal with
poor people. Europe did have national policies, but the United States has always
emphasized that poverty is a local problem and you have the American ideology of
rugged individualism that is still a dominant ideology today. The United States broke
away from a strong central government. Therefore, state rights were emphasized. Also,
the philosophy that poverty was a moral problem, not a government problem was
dominant. The position was that if you could change a person’s moral character you
could lift the person out of poverty.
Conclusion
In summary poor relief during the colonial times and during the times of the American
Revolution was still conducted at the local level with a gradual shift to the states. Lack of
moral attitudes was viewed as the main reason for poverty. However, there were
religious movements that tried to sway people’s hearts to give to those who are in need.
So, in colonial times there was a combination of private groups (religious) and local
government who did the most in helping those in need.
Chapter 5
Indoor Relief
The material for this chapter comes from the book titled: From Poor Law to Welfare
State by William I Trattner (1999). After the American Revolution in the early 1800’s
American saw a rise in industrialization. Poverty was increasing. American promoted
the capitalist idea that having money was a right, that government should not intervene
into the workings of the economy. Let the system work and whoever is rich is rich and
whoever is poor is poor.
This is known as laissez-faire economics. Rugged individualism was the standard and
was considered the best for the economy. This is fine if the start for everyone is equal. It
is not. There are people born into various social classes. To move from one social class
to another is difficult but not impossible. The question is this: Does the system
(government) have a role to play in trying to help deal with the unequal start in life that
people have? It is an answer that government leaders have argued over since colonial
times.
Many people like the sociologist Herbert Spencer believed that we should just let the
poor die off—survival of the fittest. Adam Smith the economist who influenced the
American economic system advocated that people who wanted to work could do so.
There was a developing attitude of contempt for poor people, that all poor people are
lazy and if they wanted to work, they could. That is still a dominate view today. This is
not to say that there are no people who chose not to work. Poverty was still viewed as
an individual moral problem. Only the person could get themselves out of poverty.
The growth of poverty in the 1800’s only got worse especially with the influx of poor
immigrants from Europe particularly the Irish and German poor Catholics. In fact,
according to Trattner (1999, p. 55) “in 1820, the annual report of New York’s Society for
the Prevention of Pauperism listed emigrants to this city from foreign countries as the
largest source of pauperism.” Immigrants who were not of the White Anglo Saxo
protestant group known as (WASP) were generally viewed as inferior and something to
be concerned about.
The view was by helping poor people you were only making the situation worse. That is
still a dominant ideology today. Of course, there are always some who take advantage
of the system but taking advantage of the system does not just occur with the lower
class. People across all social classes take advantage of the system whether it is on
their taxes or by some other means. The hope is that the majority do not take
advantage of the system. There is research to indicate that the majority do not. By the
way poorest people are white in the United States numerically speaking but not
proportionally speaking.
As a result of the attitude of not helping the poor, at least on a government level, the
accepted system of help at the state and local level was becoming more of an indoor
relief type, that is institutional care, helping the disabled and people who could not care
for themselves (Trattner, 1999). One of the first and biggest survey in looking at help for
poor people that impacted early social welfare was the Yates Report in 1824. Yates was
New York’s Secretary of State. Yates looked at the types of poor relief that existed. He
mentions four main types of public relief used throughout the state of New York. They
are as follows:
1. Institutional relief
2. Home relief
3. The contract system
4. Auction system
Institutional relief were institutions built to house poor people of all types including
women, men, children, disabled, and the mentally ill all housed together. Home relief
offered financial relief to those living in their own homes although it was not very much.
The contract system occurred when those in positions of power would literally have poor
people sign a labor contract with someone who could pay a wage. However, this system
was abused, and the worker was taken advantage of. The Auction system occurred
when poor people were literally auctioned off to well off individuals to work for them.
By analyzing these systems Yates offered his views on these types of relief. He then
made recommendations on improving this early welfare system. (Trattner 1991, P. 58)
in his book lists the recommendations.
1. No person able to work aged 18 to 50 shall be given public assistance.
2. Elderly, young people without parents, and the disabled shall have institutional relief.
3. Counties shall oversee these operations.
Therefore, in 1824 New York State Legislature passed the County Poorhouse Act
(Trattner 1991, p. 58). This act created County Superintendents of the Poor. Two major
shifts in welfare occurred with this act.
1. The responsibility of the poor moved to the county level.
2. The move toward institutional relief.
Examples of the move toward institutional relief are as follows:
1. Massachusetts in 1824 developed 83 almshouses which were institutions for poor
people, then by 1839 Massachusetts had 180 of them, by 1860 they had 219 (Trattner
1999).
These almshouses were run many times by corrupt officials. And the care within these
institutions was not that good. People within the institutions were not separated by age,
illnesses, mental health, those with a criminal record, alcoholics and even the blind were
all thrown together. The places were not very sanitary. As Trattner points out these
places were viewed as social cemeteries (Trattner 1999, p. 60).
The state of New York put together a committee in 1850 to study the conditions of these
institutions. The committee found filthy conditions. People were poorly fed, poorly
clothed, men and women beaten and elderly laying in their stench. “Common domestic
animals are usually more humanely provide for than the paupers in some of these
institutions,” the committee concluded (Trattner 1999, P 60).” Even orphans, the sick,
pregnant women were all thrown together.
Before long moral crusaders started to write about these conditions. People like Charles
Dickens in England and Dorothea Lynde Dix in the United States. In the mid 1800’s the
moral crusaders lobbied states to remove children from these institutions and to remove
the mentally ill and the physically handicapped and build institutions just for these
individuals. One of the hardest working individuals to promote social welfare change
was Dorothea Dix. She was one of the first advocates of social welfare change, a role
that many social workers today assume.
Trattner, in his book from Poor Law to Welfare State (1999) offers one of the best
analyses of Dorothea Dix and the role she played. The following if material taken from
that text. Dorothea Dix received a good education and was a teacher. She developed a
private school for young women and a free school for poor people. She wrote many
books but in 1836 but broke down from exhaustion. She stayed that way until 1841.
At that time, she was employed as a Sunday School teacher, teaching women inmates.
This changed her life. She could not believe the mistreatment these women were
receiving. So, she took on a mission and she never looked back. She took her case to
the state level. She got the state to make larger facilities for poor mental health patients.
She took her advocating approach to multiple states like Kentucky, Mississippi,
Louisiana, South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia.
These were dangerous trips for a woman to be taking but it did not stop her. She
traveled by train, stagecoach, wagon and in some cases by foot (Trattner 1999).
Nothing could stop her except politicians. She thought if she presented the research the
politicians would listen. She studied state coding regulations. She knew statistics. She
did case studies. She was armed to take her message to the states. She alone was
responsible for getting state legislators between 1843 and 1853 to develop state
hospitals for mental patients in nine states (Trattner 1999, P. 66) and some throughout
the world.
She had traveled over 60,000 miles with no modern transportation system. She was
able to get a bill introduced to Congress at the national level, but Congress would not
act in 1848. This bill would provide land for mental institutions. The bill finally passed
Congress in 1854. But President Pierce vetoed it saying: taking care of people is not the
role of the Federal Government. The Federal Government’s role pretty much stayed that
way until 1935.
While all of this was going on there was also a movement by Christians to help the poor
but not through just giving the poor money but through moral example. That is to teach
the poor moral virtue, that this would solve the poverty problem. These people believed
in developing moral character. There was and still is the belief that poverty was the
result of moral flaws. But there were some who believed and advocated that the
environment also played a role for those in poverty. These two ideologies are still with
today arguing that it is the individual’s fault or is it the environment one is in or is it both
as previously stated.
Summary
Indoor relief came about due to the massive amount of people living in poverty. It was
convenient to round up those on the streets and put them together in an institution with
no separation of different ages or mental capacity or other factors. But individuals came
along to help change this cruel system with people like Dorothea Dix and many others.
Institutional relief is still with us in various capacities from this time period of the 1800’s.
We will now look the late 1800’s regarding social welfare.
Chapter 6
Social Welfare in the late 1800’s
The following information is taken from the book from William I Trattner. The book is
titled: From Poor Law to Welfare State (1999). The civil war caused many types of
financial problems for families. The problems were so massive now that one could not
just blame the problem on being a sinful person.
A major problem for those in the civil war was disease. There were many sanitation
issues. Therefore, a welfare agency was developed called the U.S. Sanitary
Commission considered to be the nation’s first national public health institution (Trattner
1999, P. 78). The organization was mainly run by women in 1861. Even though it was a
national public health institution it was financed by private groups.
The group sought to educate the men in uniform on proper hygiene to hold down
disease. The women would inspect the army camps and the hospitals and teach the
men on sanitary conditions. It is estimated that thousands of lives were saved by these
women who educated the men in the field (Trattner 1999).
The women also distributed bandages, food, clothing and other needed items to the
troops (Trattner 1999, P. 79). Nurses were brought into the organization to help.
Communication networks were established between units and the relatives living back
home. The women set up safe houses for the wounded. This group became the Red
Cross. John Stuart Mill said the following of this group:
“History afforded no other examples of so great a work of usefulness extemporized by
the spontaneous self-devotion and organizing genius of a people altogether
independent of the government (Trattner 1999, P. 79).” Many future public health
reforms occurred because of this group of females. State Board of Health Commissions
emerged as a result of this group. Finally, in 1879 the first federal National Board of
Health was created.
The Sanitary Commission demonstrated what could be done effectively if people were
motivated to do so. In fact, organizations were set up and patterned themselves in the
late 1800’s after the Sanitary Commission such as the New York State Charities Aid
Association which still is in operation (Trattner 1999). Abraham Lincoln stated that no
words could do justice to the role these women played during the civil war. He said:
“God Bless the women of America (Trattner 1999, P. 80).”
The civil war taught both the north and the south that organizations could be run at a
government level which set the stage later for national welfare institutions. This is not to
say that institutions were perfect then or now.
After the civil war (1865) the United States began a massive increase in production in
coal and steel. This was known as an economic revolution. The effect meant many jobs
but also terrible working conditions in the late 1800’ and early 1900’s. Working
accidents were high. There was no 40-hour work week. People were working 10 to 12
hours a day, 6 to 7 days a week and if one complained they would be fired and put on a
list that stated to other companies do not hire. Upton Sinclair wrote his classical work
titled: The Jungle in which he exposed terrible working conditions and unsanitary
working conditions in 1905.
With the civil war ending this produced some major problems. Veterans were coming
home but were unskilled and uneducated for work. Also, the slaves were free looking for
work but were discriminated against. To deal with these problems the United States set
up the “Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands organization “which was
the nation’s first federal welfare agency (Trattner 1999, P. 83).”
President Andrew Johnson vetoed this organization, but Congress overrode his veto
and the organization lasted 6 years. This agency helped deal with all the free slaves. It
was an employment agency and an educational agency to help people with any
contracts they needed to sign. It was to help Blacks move from slavery to freedom. Of
course, it did not take away discrimination practices. The agency employed doctors to
help with the sick and helped to sanitize hospitals.
It funded schools for Black people. The agency was dissolved in 1872 but it
demonstrated that the federal government could do something to help those in need but
the philosophy of keeping the federal government out of the economy was still
extraordinarily strong. But this organization set the stage for the role that the federal
government could play in helping those who are less fortunate.
While the Freedmen’s Bureau was operating also occurring were State Board of
Charities which started to oversee all the state’s charitable and correctional institutions.
The state boards would study the institutions and make recommendations for
improvement. By 1886 there were 12 states that had state board of Charities. These
boards greatly helped to improve the functioning of state charity institutions which
influenced the welfare system at the time.
These boards also started to keep written records and reports that they could give back
to the legislators for improvements that could be made. Even with all these things
happening, private charity was viewed as the main way to give help. The Social
Darwinists were strong, that is, survival of the fittest was still the dominate ideology.
They did not want the federal government involved in anything. They believed and still
do that private competition is the best way to help people. The common theme was
“work or starve (Trattner 1999, P. 89).
Summary
The late 1800’s due to the civil war brought about some changes to welfare particular
demonstrating that things could be done at the state and federal level. The Red Cross
emerged as a federal private response to helping people. The federal government saw
fit to help the freed slaves for a while. State Board of Charities improved the conditions
of many state charity organizations.
Chapter 7
The Early 20th Century and Welfare
The following information is taken from the book titled: America’s Struggle Against
Poverty: 1900-1985 by James T. Patterson 1986. In the early 1900’s the United States
economy was booming. There was great hope that poverty would be greatly reduced.
That the plight of poor people would get better (Patterson, 1986). The dominant view
was still that poverty was the result of one’s own choice or that the person was morally
corrupt.
Francis Walker an economics professor in 1897 stated that poverty was a choice
(Paterson 1986, P. 21). Other social scientists were arguing that the environment
played a major role. That is, people are born into an advantaged situation and people
are born into a disadvantaged situation. Where one lives determines which schools you
go to, who your friends are and what type of help your parents can give you in terms of
tutoring or any going to private schools that have a cost.
Sociologists and Social Workers in the early 1900’s was presenting evidence that there
are economic or social class reasons for the continuation of poverty, that poverty is not
just the result of individual choosing. Social Scientist were showing empirical evidence
that in 1913 and 1914 that over 10 million people did not have enough money to have a
place to eat and live (Patterson 1986, P. 23). The scientists presented evidence that
poverty was not something genetically caused.
Social Scientist were now advocating for programs that could be implemented at the
federal government level that could help the lot of many poor people. Poverty could
disappear using the right social programs. This reflected a great deal of optimism.
Social work was now an academic degree. In 1919 there were 17 schools of social work
(Patterson 1986). But this view was now in contrast to the rugged individualism
philosophy. The two views that are still with us today.
The people doing this advocating in the early 1900’s was viewed then and today as
progressives. These progressives advocated for a revision of the juvenile court system,
that juveniles should be treated differently than adults. The philosophy was that the
sooner one gets to a young person the better the odds of getting out of poverty. The
progressives also advocated for minimum wages, racial justice, and making child labor
illegal (Patterson 1986).
There were organizations now calling for social security for people, such as the
American Association for Labor Legislation in 1906. Social security however would not
come about until 1935. The organization also called for minimum wages and better
working conditions. Most of these reforms did not take place however until the 1930’s.
One will learn about the 1930’s to modern times in the second welfare course.
By 1930 there was not one state that had unemployment benefits. Most of the welfare
spending prior to 1930 was still being done by private groups and at the local and state
level. The range of help by the state government in the early 1930’s was $4.33 a month
in Arkansas and $69.31 a month in Massachusetts (Patterson, 1986, P. 29).
Most of the help if it came at all was spent on indoor relief or almshouses. And
extraordinarily little relief, if any, from the federal government. The corporate world did
not want unemployment insurance. The poor had to fend for themselves until the great
depression of 1929.
Social Welfare II will pick up from 1929 to the present in dealing with social welfare. For
now, attention will be given to certain theories and terminology associated with the
welfare system.
Summary
In conclusion the early 1900’s was an economic boom period. There was hope that with
a great economy poverty would be eliminated. Social Scientists were using empirical
scientific evidence to demonstrate that the environment was playing a role in helping to
keep people in poverty. But the dominant philosophy was still enormously powerful
which is the belief that poverty is an individual choice and that the individual not the
system is to blame. This is still with us today, but the environmental view has equal
power today.
Works Cited
Cox, Lisa; Tice, Carolyn J.; and Long D, Dennis: 2019: Introduction to Social Work:
Sage.
Garthwait, Cynthia L. 2917: The Social Work Practicum: 7th edition. Pearson.
Gilbert, Neil and Terrell, Paul: 2013: Dimensions of Social Welfare Policy: 8th edition.
Pearson.
Ginsberg, Leon H., 1998: Careers in Social Work: Allyn and Bacon.
Patterson, James T. 1986: America’s Struggle Against Poverty: 1900-1985: Harvard
University Press.
Trattner, Walter I. 1999: From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social Welfare in
America: 6th edition. The Free Press.
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