
|
 |
Writings on the Poor Laws, vol. 1, ed. Michael Quinn, (Clarendon Press,
Oxford, 2001), pp. lvi, 359.
In the essays presented in this volume Bentham lays down the theoretical principles
from which he develops his proposals for reform of the English poor laws in
response to the perceived crisis in poor relief in the mid 1790s. In `Essays
on the subject of the Poor Laws' Bentham seeks to justify the principles upon
which entitlement to relief should be grounded. He moved beyond the commonplace
indictment of idelness and drink to recognize that unemployment, ill health,
old age, pregnancy and childbirth constituted a standing threat to the viability
of the families of the rural poor. He envisaged the provision of medical care,
and of ante- and post natal services to the independent poor, and the establishment
of midwifery schools in a national system of workhouses. In `Pauper Systems
Compared' he presents a sustained comparison between home relief and institutional
relief, to the detriment of the former, above all for its severance of the link
between subsistence and labour. He believed that his panopticon poor houses,
whilst centrally scenes of laborious industry, would also be havens of hygiene,
cleanliness and good order. The polemical `Observations on the Poor Bill' is
a lively critique of the Bill introduced into the House of Commons by William
Pitt in 1796. The ideas advanced here by Bentham were a significant influence
on Edwin Chadwick, and through his mediation, on the Poor Law Amendment Act
of 1834. The essays are based almost entirely on manuscript sources, and are
published here for the first time in definitive form.
Michael Quinn.
For more details of the contents of this volume and sample pages from the
publisher's web site click here.
This page last modified
2 April, 2009
by Irena
Nicoll
|