In the years 1849 and 1850, Henry Mayhew was the metropolitan correspondent of the Morning Chronicle in its national survey of labour and the poor. Only about a third of his Morning Chronicle material was included in his later and better known, publication, London Labour and the London Poor. First published in 1981, this series of six volumes constitutes Henry Mayhew¿s complete Morning Chronicle survey, in the sequence in which it was originally written in 1849 and 1850. It addresses a wealth of topics from cholera in the Jacob¿s Island area to the food markets of London. The publication of this complete survey represented the first time in which the whole of Mayhew¿s pioneering work was available in one place. The set is introduced by Dr Peter Razzell, who was co-editor of the national Morning Chronicle survey. This second volume contains letters from November 1849 to January 1850. This series will be of interest to those studying the history of social welfare, poverty and urbanisation.
The Southern Redneck: A Phenomenological Class Study
But Booth (or isn't it Stead?) combines incompatibles with the alkali of sentiment. And this failure to discern the distinctiveness of opposite first principles shows the book to be the work of sciolists, and vitiates its scheme of ...
How the Other Half Lives was a pioneering work of photojournalism by Jacob Riis, documenting the squalid living conditions in New York City slums in the 1880s.
This book seeks to challenge and debunk these myths, along the way asking tough questions about how and why they have persisted and what it would take to replace them with true stories.
Social Work and Social Welfare: An Invitation
Gaap 2004
La Vida: a Puerto Rican family in the culture of poverty - San Juan & New York
For policymakers, the need now is to get inside the 'black box' of poverty reduction - the assumption that growth, combined with demographic or political change, will lead somehow to reduced poverty.
This work discusses why some local food projects are successful while others fail, and the general lessons for working with communities, beyond food-related issues.
The Hard Worker: A Children's Story for All Generations