Poverty's prison : the poor in New South Wales 1880-1918
O'Brien, Anne1988
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Australians have accepted with sone complacency that, in the decades surrounding our early nationhood, we were world leaders in social policy. Weren't we among the first to introduce the old age pension? and wasn't Australia the workingman's paradise?
Main title:
Poverty's prison : the poor in New South Wales 1880-1918 / by Anne O'Brien
Author:
Imprint:
Carlton Vic. : Melbourne University Press, 1988
Collation:
256 pages : illustrations
Notes:
Hawkesbury-Nepean Catchment Management Trust collection
Contents:
Families -- Families inpoverty - Extended family and neighbours - The ideology of family support - Fathers -- Casual labour - State charity for the unemployment - Hazardes at work and after hours - Mothers -- Working women - Deserted wives - Surviving on the boarding-out allowance - Unmarried mothers -Reforming the fallen - Children -- Impovershed chidhood - A nineteenth century solution - Appernticeship of state children - Changing care for children - Children as breadwinners - The state and private care -- Expansion of state care - The religious impulse - Expansion of private care
Dewey class:
305.569
Language:
English
Subject:
BRN:
12449
Location | Collection | Call number | Status/Desc |
---|---|---|---|
Research | History Support Collection | 305.569 POV | Available |