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Three Cheers for the Unemployed: Government and Unemployment Before the New Deal

Three Cheers for the Unemployed: Government and Unemployment Before the New Deal

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Udo Sautter
Cambridge University Press, 3/12/1992
EAN 9780521400411, ISBN10: 0521400414

Hardcover, 418 pages, 23.7 x 15.8 x 2.6 cm
Language: English

Three Cheers for the Unemployed describes the beginnings and development of unemployment reform up to the New Deal. As a consequence of the large-scale industrialization after the Civil War, joblessness could no longer be considered to be caused by character defects, but had to be ascribed to societal forces. It became clear that traditional remedial measures could not cope with the problem adequately. By the time the United States entered World War I, reformist thinkers had devised the major tools that were later used to deal with unemployment. After the war and during most of the 1920s, these tools underwent thorough examination and refinement. The early years of the Great Depression saw them used tentatively. On the eve of the New Deal, a well-reasoned and successfully tested group of social programs was available. This book essentially refutes a social-control explanation for this process. It demonstrates that the unemployment measures of the New Deal emanated from the reformist endeavors of the Progressive Age.

List of figures and tables
Abbreviations used in the text or footnotes
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Perceiving the problem
1870s to the entry into World War I
3. Nascence and growth of the USES
World War I
4. Pondering the issues
post-war to the mid-1920s
5. Accepting the task
1928–33
6. Epilogue
Appendix
Index.