| Dorothy M. BROWN, Elizabeth McKeown, Dorothy M Brown - 2009 - 294 Seiten
...representatives supported the declaration that "home life is the highest and finest product of civilization." Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons, certainly not because of poverty. If worthy parents faced "temporary misfortune" or "deserving mothers"... | |
| Shirley A. Hill - 1999 - 220 Seiten
...were poor, to stay home and care for their children. In its final resolution, it stated: "Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization. It is the great molding force of mind and character. Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons" (Berry,... | |
| Walter I. Trattner - 2007 - 469 Seiten
...keynote, the report proclaimed: "Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization," and "children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons." For those children "who for sufficient reasons must be removed from their own homes, or who have no... | |
| Natan Sznaider - 2001 - 148 Seiten
...delivered the keynote address, which expressed the new consensus of child- welfare workers: Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization. It is the great molding force of mind and character. Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons. Parents... | |
| Grace Chang - 2000 - 262 Seiten
...Reproductive Labor," Signs 18: 1 (Autumn 1992). 65 Glenn, "From Servitude to Service Work." 66 "Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization. It is the great molding force of mind and or character.... Children of parents of worthy character, suffering from temporary misfortune, and... | |
| Uwe Wilke - 2002 - 316 Seiten
...Konferenz wurde die Wichtigkeit des Aurwachsens im Elternhaushalt betont und sanktioniert: „Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization. It is the great molding force of mind and character. Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons. Children... | |
| Margaret K. Rosenheim - 2002 - 571 Seiten
...on Dependent Children proclaimed, "Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization," and "children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons" (cited in Bremner 1971, 2: 358, 365). Unlike those in the previous era, reformers now argued that maternal... | |
| Stephen O'Connor - 2004 - 388 Seiten
...The recommendations began with a resounding affirmation of Brace's most essential insight: "Home life is the highest and finest product of civilization....deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons." But these statements were immediately followed by a forceful indictment of Brace's blanket rejection... | |
| Deborah E. Ward - 2009 - 208 Seiten
...\\hilc House coiifVrcncc called for upholding ihr value of "home life," agreeing that it represented "the highest and finest product of civilization. It is the great molding force of mind and character. Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons."' 6 The... | |
| S. J. Kleinberg - 2010 - 248 Seiten
...home rather than institutional care: "Home life is the highest and f1nest product of civilization.... Children should not be deprived of it except for urgent and compelling reasons." The conference's executive committee recognized the local base of welfare; it wanted each community... | |
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