Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2002 An Introduction to Human Services: Policy and Practice Cycles of Helping §This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: Any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; Preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images; Any rental, lease, or lending of the program.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2002 Cycles of Helping §Book Review: Elizabeth Clapp, Mothers of All Children: Women Reformers and the Rise of Juvenile Courts in Progressive Era America. l A discussion of the juvenile court movement and the role of women in the Progressive era. §Victoria Getis, “The Juvenile Court and the Progressives” l A brief examination of the vision and methods of the original proponents of the Cook County Juvenile Court in Progressive-era Chicago.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2002 Cycles of Helping §The Poor Laws and the Origins of the Welfare State hlets/the_poor_and_origins_of_the_welfare_state.htm l Description of some of the pamphlets on the British Poor Laws in the Library of the London School of Economics. §Dorothy E. Roberts, “Blacks and the History of Welfare” l Excerpted from Welfare and the Problem of Black Citizenship, 105 Yale Law Journal 1563 – 1602, (April, 1996)
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2002 Cycles of Helping §The Social Work History Station l Professor Dan Huff of the School of Social Work, Boise State University, has completed five chapters of a cyberhistory of social work’s early years. It gives a social and economic context to the early development of the professional helping relationship.