"Elizabethan poor law" Essays and Research Papers

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    Do you agree with the view that the harshness associated with the new poor law was greatly exaggerated? The New Poor Law Amendment was an act which was intended to reform the country’s poverty relief system‚ keep people out of the workhouses and reduce outdoor relief. The sources suggest different insights on the view that the harshness associated with the new poor law was greatly exaggerated. Whilst source 18 relays some ideas of uncertainty on the view‚ source 16 and 17 show an extreme level of

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    provision must have the greatest positive impact on the paupers’ lives and there be a shift in ideas of ‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’ poor. One turning point in provision for the poor was the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act which overthrew the 1601 Elizabethan Poor Law. However‚ arguably it is still not the turning point of the century because negative ideas about the poor persisted as Harris stresses - pauperism was still viewed as ‘primarily a voluntary condition’ . So‚ instead

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    During the Elizabethan period (1558-1603) the health of everybody from peasants to the wealthy was extremely poor due to the inadequate hygienic techniques used during the time. None of the people were aware exactly how they became ill‚ therefore surgeons had much difficulty to cure them. Although they rarely bathed they were oblivious to the fact this may be the source of their problems. Poor hygiene‚ brought out by infrequent bathing‚ resulted in illnesses caused by the patients’ and the surgeons’

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    Welfare Ideologies of the Past - A brief overview. (a) The Elizabethan Poor Law The legal relief of poverty was first introduced after the demise of compulsory charity that followed the reformation. There were initial parish registers of the poor in 1552 and compulsory fund raising‚ through to 1601 with the advent of the Elizabethan Poor Law (43 Eliz I Cap. 2). This law oversaw the levying of taxes for the distribution of money and food to the poor but there was a heavy emphasis on hierarchy and charity

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    This essay will be looking at health and social care within the British welfare state. To illustrate the broad structure within this topic‚ the differing roles of sectors and agencies and professions will be described and also the difference between health and social care to aid the discussion. The health and social care relationship and its distinction will then be analysed using the origins and historical background in relation to its social and ideological context. The effect of the similarities

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    Elizabeth Poor Laws

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    The Last Years of the Poor Law During the interwar period the Poor Law served as a residual safety net‚ assisting those who fell through the cracks of the existing social insurance policies. The high unemployment of 1921-38 led to a sharp increase in numbers on relief. The official count of relief recipients rose from 748‚000 in 1914 to 1‚449‚000 in 1922; the number relieved averaged 1‚379‚800 from 1922 to 1938. A large share of those on relief were unemployed workers and their dependents

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    History of Social Work

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    ......................................................................11 The Poor Law tradition ...............................................................................................................................................11 Poor Law Tradition ..................................................................................................................................................12 The Poor Law Tradition

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    Workhouse In The 1930's

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    Under the new Act‚ the threat of the Union workhouse was intended to act as a discouragement to the able-bodied pauper. This soon became known as the "workhouse test". This meant that poor relief would only be granted to those that were desperate enough and brave enough to face entering the revolting conditions of the workhouse. Another aspect of the workhouses which discouraged people was if an able-bodied man entered the workhouse‚ his entire family had to go into the workhouse with him. However

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    Mr David O'Brien

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    aspects that are present in the piece and how they relate to the question asked and the reliability of the source provided. The three aspects that I will look for are the evidence of economic pressure and how this drove people to fight against the poor law and rebel against the middle class and the oligarchs from 1838. The political movement within Chartism that spawned the general convention as well as the formation of the national charter association‚ and eventually put forward the petition in

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    Evaluation

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    that the total GDP of emerging markets could overtake that of the developed economies in 2014. • Young Working Age Populations- Most emerging markets have young working age populations that can contribute to the economy and keep retirees from the poor house. For example‚ India and Brazil have high ratios of working-age to retired populations. The bulk of India’s population is under 44‚ and that trend is in place up to 2030. China’s population is getting older‚ and the US population remains flat

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