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A Social Laboratory for Modern France: The Musée Social and the Rise of the Welfare State
Contributor(s): Horne, Janet R. (Author)
ISBN: 0822327821     ISBN-13: 9780822327820
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $102.55  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: January 2002
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Janet Horne's book provides not only an excellent history of the Musee Social but also an important new perspective on the activities of turn-of-the-twentieth-century reform networks. It demonstrates that the Musee Social constituted a unique French institution, free from Jacobin, centralizing pressures, where experts, intellectuals, and administrators could interact among themselves. Her work reveals the misunderstood but essential role played by independent reformers in the modernization of France."--Pierre Rosanvallon, directeur d'etudes a l'Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales

"This book is far more than the history of a single institution. It is also a thoughtful examination of political ideology and social discourse in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and an important and convincing argument about the origins of social policy in the Third Republic."--Don Reid, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | Public Policy - Social Services & Welfare
- Political Science | Comparative Politics
- Political Science | Political Ideologies - Communism, Post-communism & Socialism
Dewey: 361.610
LCCN: 2001040642
Physical Information: 1.31" H x 6.38" W x 9.26" (1.59 lbs) 344 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - French
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
As a nineteenth-century think tank that sought answers to France's pressing "social question," the Mus e Social reached across political lines to forge a reformist alliance founded on an optimistic faith in social science. In A Social Laboratory for Modern France Janet R. Horne presents the story of this institution, offering a nuanced explanation of how, despite centuries of deep ideological division, the French came to agree on the basic premises of their welfare state.
Horne explains how Mus e founders believed--and convinced others to believe--that the Third Republic would carry out the social mission of the French Revolution and create a new social contract for modern France, one based on the rights of citizenship and that assumed collective responsibility for the victims of social change. Challenging the persistent notion of the Third Republic as the stagnant backwater of European social reform, Horne instead depicts the intellectually sophisticated and progressive political culture of a generation that laid the groundwork for the rise of a hybrid welfare system, characterized by a partnership between private agencies and government. With a focus on the cultural origins of turn-of-the-century thought--including religion, republicanism, liberalism, solidarism, and early sociology--A Social Laboratory for Modern France demonstrates how French reformers grappled with social problems that are still of the utmost relevance today and how they initiated a process that gave the welfare state the task of achieving social cohesion within an industrializing republic.