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Creating the Welfare State investigates how private business and public bureaucracy worked together to create the structure of much of the modern welfare state in America. Covering the period from the 1980s to the present, this important volume employs interdisciplinary techniques to demonstrate how politics, economics, law, and social theory merged over the course of a century of policy formulation and implementation. The authors also draw upon previously unconsulted sources from government warehouses and archives to analyze the operation of early federal social welfare programs such as vocational rehabilitation. Their discussions range from those early programs to modern ones such as cost of living pay adjustments and social security disability benefits. This emphasis on the notion of the continuing development of welfare programs is a significant factor in the welfare state controversies--a factor often ignored by other historians and writers.
EDWARD BERKOWITZ is Associate Professor of History and the Director of the Program in History and Public Policy at George Washington University, Washington, D.C.KIM MCQUAID is Associate Professor of History at Lake Erie College.
A Newly Outrageous Fortune: A Private Social Welfare System Emerges in the Unites States, 1880-1910 The Role of Government, 1900-1920 An Atmosphere of Organization: The Rise of Welfare Capitalism, 1910-1930 Federal Social Welfare in the 1920s Seeking a New Equilibrium: Responses to the Depression, 1930-1935 Social Security and the Creation of a Public Sector, 1935-1939 Different Worlds of War Backing into the Future: Social Welfare in the 1950s American Welfare Practice: Patterns of Continuity and Change Bibliography Index