1st Edition

Voluntary Work in the Welfare State

By Mary Morris Copyright 1969
    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1998. This is Volume XVII of eighteen of a series on the Sociology of Public Policy, Welfare and Social Work. Voluntary work is undertaken for three main reasons; first, there are jobs to be done which cannot be or at least will not be done by paid personnel; second, the opportunity to give service meets a personal need felt by individual people; and third, voluntary action is a powerful force for social progress. These three reasons provide the explanation and the justification for the existence of voluntary work. The purpose of this book is to examine the present position and future role of voluntary work in the United Kingdom and to analyse its value to the individual and to the community. Its limitations as well as its achievements will be considered and criticism as well as praise will be recorded.

    Part I Voluntary Workers in Action; Chapter I Health and Welfare; Chapter II Hospitals; Chapter III Children and Young People; Chapter IV Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners; Chapter V Information and Advice; Chapter VI Race Relations; Chapter VII Neighbourly Help; Part II The Volunteer and the Community; Chapter VIII Voluntary Work and the Volunteer; Chapter IX Voluntary Work and the Community; Chapter X The Future of Voluntary Work

    Biography

    Mary Morris