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Med känsla eller förnuft?: Svensk debatt om filantropi 1870-1914
In: Stockholm studies in history 59
In: Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis
Reformvilja eller riksdagstaktik ?: Junkrarna och representationsfrågan 1847 - 54
In: Stockholm studies in history 22
In: Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis
SCIENTIFIC PHILANTHROPY AND WELFARE POLITICS OF SOLIDARITY : A discussion of the roots of the Swedish welfare state
So far, studies of Swedish 20th-century social policy have emphasized the differences between the voluntary aid common around 1900 and the solidarity of welfare policy at mid-century. Means tests have been described as central instruments in the voluntary social work, while the welfare state was built on general principles of care. The question is, however, if the differences between the earlier and later forms of social policy can be characterized in such simple terms. A comparison has been made of departure points found in the social policies of the two periods. The results confirm that a significantly new way of thinking had taken shape in the years around the Second World War, but the study also shows that that the ideas concerning the welfare state contain threads that can be traced back to the scientific philanthropy of a few years earlier. The idea of social engineering was nothing new, and the idea that rights could be exchanged for duties had still not been deserted in the 1940s. In conclusion it can be said that the welfare state and the welfare politics of solidarity in several respects were built upon the principles of care that were formulated in about 1900.
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Educating through Social Policy: Compensation for Blindness in Sweden – An Example of Creating Norms and Identities
In: Scandinavian journal of disability research, Band 8, Heft 4, S. 211-231
ISSN: 1745-3011
Educating through Social Policy: Compensation for Blindness in Sweden – An Example of Creating Norms and Identities
Swedish industrialization at the turn of the century 1900 severely hit the trades, which were the traditional source of income for blind people. The public debate caused by the new conditions led to a political decision in 1934 that provided for state-financed compensation for blindness. This decision reveals that politicians, experts and blind people themselves agreed to view "the blind" as a group of disabled persons that was particularly dependent on public support. This article focuses on underlying norms and identities present in this debate. The instruments for the study are adapted from the historian Anders Berge and the sociologists Zygmunt Bauman and Richard Jenkins. Berge argues that social policy a century ago combined the ambition to create some security and to provide moral education. Bauman and Jenkins have developed theories concerning the process of identity creation based upon a "we-and-them" perspective.
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Swedish Seaside Sanatoria in the Beginning of the Twentieth Century
In: The Journal of the history of childhood and youth, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 249-266
ISSN: 1941-3599