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Full-Text Articles in Social Work
Ideology And Opportunity In Social Work During The New Deal Years, Norma Kolko Phillips
Ideology And Opportunity In Social Work During The New Deal Years, Norma Kolko Phillips
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
As the country moved from a dominant ideology of voluntarism towards the welfare state during the New Deal years, conflicts and compromises occurred within the social work profession that required a definition of the role the profession would assume with relation to the public sector of social welfare. The nature of the relationship that evolved between social work and government, and the accommodations made by each during the New Deal years, and particularly around the passage of the Social Security Act of 1935, are examined.
Public Preferences Concerning Future Directions In Social Security, David L. Klemmack, Lucinda L. Roff
Public Preferences Concerning Future Directions In Social Security, David L. Klemmack, Lucinda L. Roff
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Using data collected from a probability sample of 1030 adult Alabamians, this study segmented respondents among those favoring limited expansion, maintenance, and limited contraction of the social security retirement program. Those favoring some expansion in the system tended to be less well educated and affluent, and more likely to be retired, nonwhite, and to identify themselves as Democrats than did those favoring maintenance or some limited contraction of the system. The findings suggest the potential for cleavages among the population, based primarily on socioeconomic status, in ongoing discussions about the system's future.