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Cover image of the book A Social Welfare Program for the State of Florida
Books

A Social Welfare Program for the State of Florida

Author
Hastings H. Hart and Clarence L. Stonaker
Ebook
Publication Date
50 pages

About This Book

This booklet outlines the social work of the state of Florida. Among the topics discussed are war activities, care of soldiers and their families, food conservation, education in patriotism, administration of boards and institutions, the public health service, the prison system, infant mortality, child labor, recreation, public education, and care of the poor.

HASTINGS H. HART was the director of the Department of Child-Helping at the Russell Sage Foundation.

CLARENCE L. STONAKER was a staff member of the State Charities Aid and Prison Reform Association of New Jersey.

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Cover image of the book Social Case Workers and Better Industrial Conditions
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Social Case Workers and Better Industrial Conditions

Author
Shelby M. Harrison
Ebook
Publication Date
24 pages

About This Book

This booklet discusses social case workers and how they contribute to better industrial conditions. Topics include how information spreads, investigation of industrial facts, adequate plan of treatment, the personal equipment of the case worker, health and income, health and hours of labor, appreciation of the relation between labor conditions and social conditions, and making case data accessible to inquirers.

SHELBY M. HARRISON was the director of surveys and exhibits at the Russell Sage Foundation.

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Cover image of the book Relief: A Primer for the Family Rehabilitation Work of the Buffalo Charity Organization Society Prepared by Its Secretary
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Relief: A Primer for the Family Rehabilitation Work of the Buffalo Charity Organization Society Prepared by Its Secretary

Author
Frederic Almy
Ebook
Publication Date
36 pages

About This Book

This booklet provides general principles for charity work. It discusses lack of male support, disability, children, volunteer visitors, churches, city aid, new applications, pensions, budgets, loans, pauperizing, and prevention.

FREDERIC ALMY was secretary of the Buffalo Charity Organization.  

 

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Cover image of the book On Being a Director: An Open Letter to One of the Board of a Society for Organizing Charity
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On Being a Director: An Open Letter to One of the Board of a Society for Organizing Charity

Author
Alexander Johnson
Ebook
Publication Date
4 pages

About This Book

In this letter, Alexander Johnson reminds the director of a charity organization of the difference between managing a business and managing a charity.

ALEXANDER JOHNSON was general secretary of the National Conference of Charities and Correction.  

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Cover image of the book Motherhood and Pensions
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Motherhood and Pensions

Author
Mary E. Richmond
Ebook
Publication Date
8 pages

About This Book

In this booklet, Mary E. Richmond discusses the arguments for and against mothers’ pensions. She maintains that policies legislating that mothers stay home with their children may defend motherhood at the expense of mothers.

MARY E. RICHMOND was the director of the Charity Organization Department of the Russell Sage Foundation.  

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Cover image of the book The Use of Standardized Ability Tests in American Secondary Schools and Their Impact  on Students, Teachers, and Administrators
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The Use of Standardized Ability Tests in American Secondary Schools and Their Impact on Students, Teachers, and Administrators

Technical Report No. 3 on the Social Consequences of Testing
Authors
Orville G. Brim Jr.
David A. Goslin
David C. Glass
Isadore Goldberg
Ebook
Publication Date
480 pages

About This Book

This report, a collaboration between Project Talent at the University of Pittsburgh and the Russell Sage Foundation, presents the results of a survey of the attitudes of secondary school students, teachers, and counselors toward ability tests and provides an appraisal of the extent of these tests’ use.  

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Cover image of the book Work in Black and White
Books

Work in Black and White

Striving for the American Dream
Authors
Enobong Hannah Branch
Caroline Hanley
Paperback
$37.50
Add to Cart
Publication Date
6 in. × 9 in. 232 pages
ISBN
978-0-87154-023-2

About This Book

“Enobong Hannah Branch and Caroline Hanley have written an insightful book that documents just how fragile the American Dream is and always has been for Black workers. Anyone who wants to understand the complex, nuanced relationship between race, gender, and economic insecurity needs to pick up Work in Black and White immediately.”
—ADIA WINGFIELD, vice dean of faculty development and diversity, professor of sociology, Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor of Arts and Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis

Work in Black and White deftly weaves Black and White workers’ sense making of their labor market insecurities with clear historical and demographic analyses. ‘Stories have the power to make inequality legitimate,’ the authors write and go on to document the commonalities and divergence in stories told by educated men and women. While Black and White workers share aspirations for security, they part ways on how to understand the barriers to achieving it. Black workers recognize continuities in racism and White nepotism but also tend to believe they have some control over their own futures. Whites misperceive their precarity as a loss of racial privilege, while being blind to their advantaged reliance on White networks to get and keep jobs. Both groups embrace myths around hard work, education, and meritocracy and so are unable to imagine, much less generate, a political agenda to deal with the profound structural weaknesses of the U.S. economy. Read this book.”
— DONALD TOMASKOVIC-DEVEY, professor of sociology and director, Center for Employment Equity, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Work in Black and White reminds us that leaving school is just the beginning of the struggle for economic security. Many workers experience recessions as new threats and recoveries as challenges to their past accomplishments. And, of course, nothing works the same for women and men or Blacks and Whites. Enobong Hannah Branch and Caroline Hanley build a case for employment policy that goes beyond credentials and self-reliance; America needs to reset the imbalance between workers and employers.”
—MICHAEL HOUT, professor of sociology and director, Center for Advanced Social Science Research, New York University

The ability to achieve economic security through hard work is a central tenet of the American Dream, but significant shifts in today’s economy have fractured this connection. While economic insecurity has always been a reality for some Americans, Black Americans have historically long experienced worse economic outcomes than Whites. In Work in Black and White, sociologists Enobong Hannah Branch and Caroline Hanley draw on interviews with 79 middle-aged Black and White Americans to explore how their attitudes and perceptions of success are influenced by the stories American culture has told about the American Dream – and about who should have access to it and who should not.

Branch and Hanley find that Black and White workers draw on racially distinct histories to make sense of today’s rising economic insecurity. White Americans have grown increasingly pessimistic and feel that the American Dream is now out of reach, mourning the loss of a sense of economic security which they took for granted. But Black Americans tend to negotiate their present insecurity with more optimism, since they cannot mourn something they never had. All educated workers bemoaned the fact that their credentials no longer guarantee job security, but Black workers lamented the reality that even with an education, racial inequality continues to block access to good jobs for many.

The authors interject a provocative observation into the ongoing debate over opportunity, security, and the American Dream: Among policymakers and the public alike, Americans talk too much about education. The ways people navigate insecurity, inequality, and uncertainty rests on more than educational attainment. The authors call for a public policy that ensures dignity in working conditions and pay while accounting for the legacies of historical inequality.

Americans want the game of life to be fair. While the survey respondents expressed common ground on the ideal of meritocracy, opinions about to achieve economic security for all diverge along racial lines, with the recognition – or not – of differences in current and past access to opportunity in America.

Work in Black and White is a call to action for meaningful policies to make the premise of the American Dream a reality.

ENOBONG HANNAH BRANCH is Senior Vice President for Equity and Professor of Sociology, Rutgers University

CAROLINE HANLEY is Associate Professor of Sociology, William & Mary

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Cover image of the book The WPA and Federal Relief Policy
Books

The WPA and Federal Relief Policy

Author
Donald S. Howard
Ebook
Publication Date
881 pages

About This Book

This book examines the Work Projects Administration, previously known as the Work Progress Administration, as well as other national relief policies. The WPA was the name applied to the federally operated and financed program inaugurated in the summer of 1935 in which as many as fifty federal agencies cooperated in providing jobs for workers meeting prescribed conditions of eligibility.

Donald S. Howard was assistant director of the Charity Organization Department of the Russell Sage Foundation.

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Cover image of the book The Work of the Little Theatres
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The Work of the Little Theatres

The Groups They Include, the Plays They Produce, Their Tournaments, and the Handbooks They Use
Author
Clarence Arthur Perry
Ebook
Publication Date
228 pages

About This Book

A survey of amateur and community theatrical productions and activity in the early twentieth century, in particular dramatics for children through public and private schools, playground and community centers, and various voluntary organizations. With a selected bibliography for amateur workers in drama.

Clarence Arthur Perry was the author of Wider Use of the School Plant, Housing for the Machine Age, and The Rebuilding of Blighted Areas.

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Cover image of the book Volunteer Attorneys and Legal Services for the Poor
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Volunteer Attorneys and Legal Services for the Poor

New York’s CLO Program
Authors
Douglas E. Rosenthal
Robert A. Kagan
Debra Quatrone
Ebook
Publication Date
245 pages

About This Book

This report is about the Community Law Offices (CLO), which operated two neighborhood law offices in Manhattan—in East and Central Harlem—that provided free legal services to individuals and groups who could not afford private attorneys. CLO relied primarily on attorneys in private practice who volunteered part of their time to handle the cases brought to the two offices. Formation and growth, an overview of its operations, and an evaluation of volunteer performance are discussed.

Douglas E. Rosenthal was chief of the Foreign Commerce Section of the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice. Robert A. Kagan is professor of political science and law at the University of California, Berkeley.

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