Public Social Expenditure in Ireland


Book Description

Pamphlet presenting a statistical analysis of public expenditure resource allocation in respect of education (educational expenditure), health, housing, and social security and welfare in Ireland - includes references and statistical tables.










Report on Public Expenditure


Book Description




The Irish Social Services


Book Description

Introductary textbook on the social services in Ireland - covers social development, guaranteed income, housing (incl. Planning of housing needs, housing policy, living conditions, etc.), Education, health services, welfare (incl. Social work), etc., And includes comparisons with EC social policy. Bibliography pp. 265 to 270, references and statistical tables.










Irish Social Services


Book Description




The Birth of Social Welfare in Ireland, 1922-52


Book Description

This is the first publication to look in detail at the politics and the policies of the development of the social welfare system in Ireland. It aims to shed some light on the broader political history of Ireland, on the political parties and the key figures of the time, in the 1920s through to the 1950s, through an examination of one of the country's major social policy areas.




Social Security in Ireland, 1939-1952


Book Description

This book explores the factors which have shaped the Irish welfare state, through a case study of social security development between 1939 and 1952. At the heart of contemporary debates about the influences shaping welfare state outcomes lie the concepts of industrialisation, modernisation, religion, and patterns of state-formation. The Irish case provides a unique insight into these debates. Ireland is a European welfare state, but one in which colonial legacies are paramount. It is a modern, but late-industrialising nation, and for much of the modern period, Catholicism has been unusually influential. The book looks at how these idiosyncratic Irish experiences shaped a distinctive welfare state, and considers what this tells us about contemporary theoretical perspectives on social policy. This account of the behind the scenes battles over social security, tells us a great deal about how the welfare state in Ireland took the shape it did, and in the process, raises questions about well-established accounts of the role of the Church, political parties, and interest groups in shaping distributive outcomes which would persist for many decades.