Development of social welfare systems in the United States and Japan: a comparative study |
From inside the book
24 pages matching industrial maturity in this book
Page ii
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 24
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Chapter One Comparison of Social Welfare Systems | 1 |
The Period | 33 |
Agrarian Democracy and Poor Law | 40 |
11 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administration almshouse benefits changes Charity Organization Charity Organization Societies compulsory democratic development of social drive to maturity early economic growth economic liberalism Elizabethan Poor Law Emperor employers England established feudal forces fukoku kyohei governmental groups Health Insurance Law Ibid ideas ideology immigrants impotent poor income increasing indigent individual individualistic industrial maturity institutions Japan Karl de Schweinitz koku labor legislation Leiby marginalist Meiji Meiji Constitution Meiji government Meiji period ment mercantilist Ministry Modern Japan movement national health insurance nineteenth century paternalistic patterns paupers pension percent period Peter Duus political poor relief population poverty prefectural principle private charities problems public assistance public relief public responsibility reform Relief Regulation rice Shakai Jigyo Daigaku sickness social insurance social policy Social Security social welfare system structure tion Tokyo traditional transition unemployment insurance United values voluntary W.W. Rostow wages Western workers York Zaibatsu