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- Title
Allies or Antagonists? Philanthropic Reformers and Business Reformers in the Progressive Era.
- Authors
Mandell, Nikki
- Abstract
In the early twentieth century, amid heightening industrial tensions, many large corporations introduced welfare work to co-opt their employees' loyalties and pacify public anger. Many of the techniques and ideas of what became known as “welfare capitalism” were adapted from charity aid and settlement work. Over time, however, labor relations moved from being identified as a social reform issue—bound up with other issues on which the new profession of social work concentrated—to a business management prerogative. This article argues that professionalization played a significant role in these developments. Philanthropic reformers initially claimed welfare work as part of their professional agenda. However, in the second decade of the century, the social work profession began to narrow its field of operations. As social work's ambivalent claims on the factory and shop floor atrophied, business schools were introducing elements of industrial social work into their new management curriculums. The burgeoning field of professional labor management incorporated welfare work as one of its essential tools.
- Subjects
UNITED States; INDUSTRIAL welfare; INDUSTRIAL management; INDUSTRIAL relations; PROFESSIONALIZATION; SOCIAL services; EMPLOYEE benefits; HISTORY; TWENTIETH century; HISTORY of industrial relations
- Publication
Journal of the Gilded Age & Progressive Era, 2012, Vol 11, Issue 1, p71
- ISSN
1537-7814
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S1537781411000466