The Challenge of Urban Poverty: Charity Reformers in New York City, 1835-1890Arno Press, 1980 - 203 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 85
Seite 22
... poor more receptive to moral advice . Social reformers realized , particularly after the depression , that it would be difficult to reach a starving man through moral means alone . So the first order of business was to feed the poor and ...
... poor more receptive to moral advice . Social reformers realized , particularly after the depression , that it would be difficult to reach a starving man through moral means alone . So the first order of business was to feed the poor and ...
Seite 31
... poor . The poor became part of a fascinating urban landscape which attracted the curiosity of charity workers . Reports from benevolent societies for this period are filled with detailed accounts of the manners , living conditions , and ...
... poor . The poor became part of a fascinating urban landscape which attracted the curiosity of charity workers . Reports from benevolent societies for this period are filled with detailed accounts of the manners , living conditions , and ...
Seite 132
... poor could never be assimilated . Accordingly , charity workers continued to promote repressive measures against the poor . At the same time the accretion of thousands of immigrants form exotic European and Asian countries had given the ...
... poor could never be assimilated . Accordingly , charity workers continued to promote repressive measures against the poor . At the same time the accretion of thousands of immigrants form exotic European and Asian countries had given the ...
Inhalt
Chapter | 1 |
AN ENVIRONMENTALIST APPROACH TO POVERTY | 27 |
CIVIL WAR THE IRISH AND HEREDITARY PAUPERISM | 63 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The Challenge of Urban Poverty: Charity Reformers in New York City, 1835-1890 Philip M. Hosay Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1980 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
AICP American Association for Improving benevolent societies Board of Health C. L. Brace charity movement Charity Organization Society charity reformers charity workers Charles L Charles Loring Brace Christian Union city's Conference of Charities decade dependence depraved depression disease Eighth Annual Report Emma Brace environment evil Fifth Annual Report Fourth Annual Report George Templeton Strong Germans Henry Codman Potter Henry Pellew hereditarian hereditary House Reform impoverished Improving the Condition Independent Industrial Commission Irish Josephine Shaw Lowell laboring classes living conditions outdoor relief pauperism percent poor population poverty private charities Proceedings public welfare Reformers believed SCAA Second Annual Report Seth Low settlement Seventh Annual Report Sixteenth Annual Report slums social reformers SRJD Street Third Annual Report Thirteenth Annual Report Thirty-Sixth Annual Report Twenty-First Annual Report Twenty-Fourth Annual Report Twenty-Second Annual Report University Press urban visitor welfare agencies wrote one charity wrote one reformer York Association York City York's