From Rights to Needs

A History of Family Allowances in Canada, 1929-92

By Raymond B. Blake
Categories: Political Science, Canadian Political Science, Public & Social Policy, History, Canadian History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774815727, 392 pages, December 2008
Paperback : 9780774815734, 392 pages, July 2009
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774815741, 392 pages, July 2009
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774858687, 392 pages, May 2009

Table of contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1 The Dawning of a New Era in Social Security, 1929-43

2 Family Allowances Comes to Canada, 1943-45

3 The 1944 Family Allowances Debate and The Politics of It All

4 Sharing the Wealth: The Registration for Family Allowances Begins, 1945

5 The Impact of Family Allowance to the 1960s

6 Poverty, Politics, and Family Allowances, 1960-70

7 Family Allowances and Constitutional Change, 1968-72

8 Wrestling with Universality, 1972-83

9 The Demise of Family Allowances, 1984-99

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

An eloquent exposition of how Canada’s welfare state and social policy has been transformed over the past half century.

Description

This book explores the family allowance phenomenon from the idea's debut in the House of Commons in 1929 to the program's demise as a universal program under the Mulroney government in 1992. Although successive federal governments remained committed to its underlying principle of universality, party politics, bureaucracy, federal-provincial wrangling, and the shifting priorities of citizens eroded the rights-based approach to social security and replaced it with one based on need. In tracing the evolution of one social security program within a national perspective, From Rights to Needs sheds new light on how Canada’s welfare state and social policy has been transformed over the past half century.