mothers, social science, and the Victorian poverty experts /
Kathleen Callanan Martin.
New York, N.Y. :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2008.
ix, 229 pages ;
23 cm
Includes bibliographical references (pages 212-223) and index.
Prologue: Victorian social science in a twentieth-century world -- Introduction to Victorian poverty studies -- Two royal commissions -- Protestant paradigms in Victorian poverty studies -- Political economy and the new poor law -- From political economy to social science -- Ignoble savages on relief: social Darwinism in late Victorian poverty studies -- Science and pseudoscience in Victorian and Edwardian poverty studies -- Three case studies in a priori social science -- Unanswered questions, unasked questions, and an experimental counter-hypothesis -- Why critique the Victorian social science of poverty?
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This is the first detailed and systematic study of the social science of poverty as practiced by the Victorian experts who had so much influence on relief policy in this area, and who were among the founders of British social science. The book examines what they knew, or what they thought they knew, about the poor.
Poor-- Government policy-- Great Britain-- History-- 19th century.
Poverty-- Research-- Great Britain-- History-- 19th century.