Visit our new beta site!

social welfare

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

social welfare or public charity, organized provision of educational, cultural, medical, and financial assistance to the needy. Modern social welfare measures may include any of the following: the care of destitute adults; the treatment of the mentally ill; the rehabilitation of criminals; the care of destitute, neglected, and delinquent children; the care and relief of the sick or handicapped; the care and relief of needy families; and supervisory, educational, and constructive activity, especially for the young.

Early Forms of Assistance

Among the Greeks and Romans public assistance was given chiefly to those holding full citizenship. It was early connected with religion, as among the Hebrews and, from them, among the Christians and later the Muslims. The Christian Church was the main agency of social welfare in the Middle Ages, supplemented by the guilds. Later, national and local governmental agencies, as well as many private agencies, took over much of the charitable activity of the church.

First of the extensive state efforts was the Elizabethan poor law of 1601, which attempted to classify dependents and provide special treatment for each group on the local (parish) level. During the Industrial Revolution, many entrepreneurs believed that social welfare programs undertaken by the state violated the concepts of laissez faire and therefore opposed such measures. Exceptions were such men as Robert Owen , who believed that social welfare measures were essential but their implementation should be undertaken cooperatively rather than as a function of the state.

Modern Welfare Programs

The first modern government-supported social welfare program for broad groups of people, not just the poor, was undertaken by the German government in 1883. Legislation in that year provided for health insurance for workers, while subsequent legislation introduced compulsory accident insurance and retirement pensions. In the next 50 years, spurred by socialist theory and the increasing power of organized labor, state-supported social welfare programs grew rapidly, so that by the 1930s most of the world's industrial nations had some type of social welfare program.

Not all governments have equally extensive social welfare systems. Great Britain and the Scandinavian countries, often termed "welfare states," have wide-ranging social welfare legislation. Britain's National Health Service, for example, was established (1948) to provide free medical treatment to all. Private philanthropies and charitable organizations, however, continue to operate in these countries in many areas of public welfare. International relief bodies, such as the Red Cross , and agencies of the United Nations, such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), provide social welfare services throughout the world, especially during times of distress and in poverty-stricken areas.

In the United States the Social Security Act of 1935 provided for federally funded financial assistance to the elderly, the blind, and dependent children. Subsequent amendments broadened the act in terms of coverage provided and eligibility; included was the provision for medical insurance to the aged (1965) under the Medicare program and to low-income families (1965) under the Medicaid program.

In the United States public assistance has increasingly come under state and federal control, although private philanthropy still plays a major role. By the early 1990s the Clinton administration approved changes in many states' welfare systems, including work requirements in exchange for benefits (so-called workfare) and time limits. In 1996 the president signed a bill enacting the most sweeping changes in social welfare policy since the New Deal. In general the bill, which sought to end long-term dependence on welfare programs, represented a reversal of previous welfare policy, shifting some of the federal government's role to the states and cutting many benefits. Among the bill's major provisions were the requirement that about a quarter of the population then on welfare be working or training for work by 1997 (a goal that was reached in most states) and that a half do so by 2002; the granting of lump sums to states to run their own welfare and work programs; an end to the federal guarantee of cash assistance for poor children; the limitation of lifetime welfare benefits to five years (with hardship exemptions for some); the requirement that the head of every welfare family work within two years of receiving benefits or lose them; and the establishment of stricter eligibility standards for the Supplemental Security Income program (which excluded many poor disabled children from benefits).

In terms of reducing the welfare rolls, the bill initially proved successful; in 1999 there were fewer welfare recipients then there had been in 30 years. Most states also reported a surplus of federal welfare funds. Those funds, which by law remained fixed for five years, provided an unforeseen benefit for the states, enabling some states to increase social welfare spending. Additional changes passed in 2005 forced states to increase the hours worked by recipients while tightening the regulations for those who are affected by the work requirements, raising concerns in a number of states with education and addiction-treatment programs for welfare recipients.

Bibliography

See R. E. Asher, United Nations and the Promotion of the General Welfare (1957); H. Kraus, ed., International Cooperation for Social Welfare (1960); A. C. Marts, Man's Concern for His Fellow-man (1961); S. Mencher, Poor Law to Poverty Program (1967); J. F. Handler, Reforming the Poor (1972); E. W. Martin, Comparative Development in Social Welfare (1972); W. I. Trattner, From Poor Law to Welfare State (1974).

Author not available, SOCIAL WELFARE., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

A liberal theory of social welfare: fairness, utility, and the Pareto principle.
Yale Law Journal; 11/1/2000; Chang, Howard F.; 30563 words; ... legal regimes by the criterion of social welfare, which economists usually take ... that any reasonable notion of social welfare would conform to the Pareto principle ... of affairs over another, then social welfare must be higher in the first state ...
Applying Rawlsian social justice to welfare reform: an unexpected finding for social work.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 9/1/2005; Banerjee, Mahasweta M.; 8329 words; ... Regulating the lives of women: Social welfare policy from colonial times to ... about reasons for returning to welfare. Social Work, 49(2), 185-194. Bane, Mary ... and Edward A. McSweeney. (1987). Social welfare and social justice. New Jersey ...
Do social-welfare policies reduce poverty? A cross-national assessment.
Social Forces; 3/1/1999; Kenworthy, Lane; 8094 words; A central aim of social-welfare policies is to reduce poverty. Every ... A number of analysts contend that social-welfare policies do indeed help to alleviate ... empirical assessment of the utility of social-welfare policies in reducing poverty. I do ...
Social welfare in the 1990s in Mexico: the case of 'marginal' families in the Mazahua region
Anthropologica; 1/1/2002; Bordi, Ivonne Vizcarra; 9591 words; Keywords: social welfare, PROGRESA, social control, poverty ... Official Discourses: State, Poverty and Social Welfare More than any other factor, the crises ... regulation agencies (Hayek, 1983), social welfare still is at the core of the continuity ...
The state of the welfare state: German social policy between macroeconomic retrenchment and microeconomic recalibration.
West European Politics; 10/1/2003; Leibfried, Stephan Obinger, Herbert; 8785 words; ... to a change of course in social policy. THE GERMAN WELFARE STATE: STRUCTURAL MAKEUP ... state? A re-regulation of social welfare at the European level has ... structural weakness of Germany's welfare state. Although social service provision was expanded ...
Social welfare before the Elizabethan Poor Laws: the early Christian tradition, AD 33 to 313.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 6/1/2006; Faherty, Vincent E.; 5181 words; Current social welfare history texts in the United States ... informational gap since what is labeled social welfare today has been organized and delivered ... roles, and the services provided by the social welfare system in Christian communities, during ...
Charitable Choice and faith-based welfare: a call for social work.
Social Work; 7/1/2002; Cnaan, Ram A. Boddie, Stephanie C.; 8570 words; ... willingness to incorporate new social services providers into our welfare system. If these providers ... effectiveness of faith-based social services remains untested ... congregations and faith-based social services providers with other ... Careful study of faith-based social services should ...
Everyone Is Still on Welfare: The Role of Redistribution in Social Policy.
Social Work; 10/1/2001; Abramovitz, Mimi; 7250 words; ... s framework of a three-tiered social welfare system and showed that nearly ... fiscal welfare; public assistance; social welfare; tax redistribution Two decades ... Reagan launched a historic shift in social welfare policy. Marked by massive social ...
A Multicultural Chronology of Welfare Policy and Social Work In the United States.
Social Justice; 3/22/2001; Plait, Anthony M. Cooreman, Jenifer L.; 16689 words; ... States Win a Right to Equal Welfare. New York Times (May 18 ... 19): 3. Kurz,D. 1998 Women, Welfare, and Domestic Violence. Social Justice 25,1: 105-122, Lucas ... Participation to Disenfranchisement. Social Justice 25,1:47-66. Nasar ... Franklin Frazier and Black Social Work in the 1920s ... .
Teaching social welfare policy: a comparison of two pedagogical approaches.
Journal of Social Work Education; 9/22/2005; Anderson, Debra K. Harris, Barbara M.; 7512 words; ... undergraduate students, however, social welfare policy ranks among their least ... in attempting to understand social welfare policies. Finally, some have ... complexities that characterize social welfare problems. This is hardly news to instructors of social welfare ...
Reclaiming community? From welfare society to welfare state in Australian Catholic social thought.
The Australian Journal of Politics and History; 3/1/2003; Smyth, Paul; 7567 words; ... Chifley's economic state In terms of social welfare this vision of a wage earner welfare ... the expansion of state provided social welfare which was seen as a threat to ... crisis of identity for Catholic social welfare. As David Shinnick observed at ...
The Dynamics of Social Welfare Policy.
Policy & Practice; 9/1/2007; Solomon, Frank; 446 words; The Dynamics of Social Welfare Policy By Joel Blau and Mimi Abramovitz ... List Price $64.34 The Dynamics of Social Welfare Policy, second edition, reinvents the contemporary social welfare policy textbook. Organized around ...
Collective representations and social praxis: local politics in the Norwegian welfare state.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute; 12/1/2002; Kronenfeld, David B. Vike, Halvard; 12608 words; Introduction The Norwegian welfare state, while in some ... model of successful social support for the rest ... ignorant of the deep social and individual problems that welfare clients represent ... municipal leadership view social welfare (and other expenditures ...
Putting wage-earners into wage-earners' welfare states: the relationship between social policy and industrial relations in Australia and New Zealand.
Australian Journal of Social Issues; 9/22/2006; Ramia, Gaby Wailes, Nick; 8851 words; ... labour market protections and social security and welfare benefits and services. Regimes ... welfare' to traditional 'social welfare' (social security and social services ... ospects', International Journal of Social Welfare, 12 (2), 73-85. Lodemel ...
Business and the Welfare State in France and Germany.(The Politics of Social Risk: Business and Welfare State Development)(Book review)
Independent Review; 3/22/2006; Janson, Nathalie; 2023 words; ... for firms to support the welfare state's development. One ... cost-benefit analysis and shows that social-policy design outcomes depend ... to develop and implement social policies and did promote ... imply that it has promoted welfare-state development as such. Mares confuses the necessity of ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Globalization, welfare reform and the social economy: developing an alternative approach to analyzing social welfare systems in the post-industrial era.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 6/1/2007; Gonzales, Vanna; 9255 words;
Cleavage in American attitudes toward social welfare.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 12/1/2004; Epstein, William M.; 8311 words;
Perspectives on globalization, social justice and welfare.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 6/1/2007; Midgley, James; 7083 words;
Legislating the family: heterosexist bias in social welfare policy frameworks.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 12/1/2004; Lind, Amy; 5764 words;
Welfare's social provisions.(Diminishing Welfare: A Cross-National Study of Social Provision)(Book Review)
Monthly Labor Review; 6/1/2003; Wasser, Solidelle Fortier; 773 words;
Jo Ann Schneider, Social Capital and Welfare Reform: Organizations, Congregations, and Community.(Book Notes)(Book review)
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 9/1/2007; Conley, Amy C.; 567 words;
The New Social Democrats?(*).(The Future of the Welfare State: East and West)
Social Research; 12/22/1997; Ladanyi, Janos Szelenyi, Ivan; 5106 words;
A Social Laboratory for Modern France: the Musee Social and the Rise of the Welfare State.(Book Review)
Journal of Social History; 12/22/2003; Beudoin, Steven M.; 1040 words;
Social Welfare and Individual Responsibility.(Review)
Reason; 6/1/1999; Shapiro, Daniel; 2630 words;
Introduction: globalization, social justice, and social welfare.
Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare; 6/1/2007; MacDonald, Frederick Midgley, James; 2338 words;
Browse by alphabet: