ABSTRACT
First Published in 1998. This is Volume XVI of eighteen in a series on Public Policy, Welfare and Social Work. The main purpose is to throw some light on the changing role of voluntary organisations and their relation with statutory bodies in the provision of the British social services.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|26 pages
Some Aspects of Theory and Practice in the 19th and early 20th Centuries
chapter I|14 pages
Influences Affecting Social Policy and Voluntary Action
chapter II|10 pages
New Forms of Partnership
part II|49 pages
The Maternity and Child Welfare Movement 1
chapter III|10 pages
The Pioneer Phase
chapter IV|9 pages
The Pioneer Phase
chapter V|16 pages
Developments Between the Two World Wars
chapter VI|10 pages
the Second World War and the Post-War Transition Period
part III|93 pages
The Mental Health Services 1
chapter VII|7 pages
First Phase in the Development of Social Policy
chapter VIII|9 pages
Private Enterprise: Pioneer Work for the Insane
chapter IX|13 pages
Private Enterprise (Continued): Pioneer Work for the Mentally Defective
chapter X|11 pages
Expansion Between The Two World Wars
chapter XI|13 pages
Expansion Between The Two World Wars (Continued)
chapter XII|13 pages
The Relation Between Voluntary Action And Social Policy
chapter XIII|10 pages
The Response To The Emergency: The War And Post-War Developments
chapter XIV|11 pages
Changes in Social Policy: the Effect on Voluntary Organisations
part IV|80 pages
The Welfare of the Blind
chapter XV|18 pages
Voluntary Action In The Pioneer Phase
chapter XVI|12 pages
Social Policy in the Pioneer Phase 1
chapter XVII|10 pages
The Expansion of Social Policy Between the Two World Wars
chapter XIX|17 pages
Developments During The Second World War: The Post-War Period
part V|45 pages
Reflections on the Changing Role of Voluntary Organisations and their Relations with Statutory Bodies