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Politics, Industrialization and Citizenship: Unemployment Policy in England, France and the United States, 1890–1950*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2009

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With the “forward march of labor halted”, and labor movements everywhere in retreat, T.H. Marshall's state-based emphasis on social welfare as “social right” has reminded those interested in reform that appeals to membership in a national community, the essence of citizenship, have served to rally groups to successful struggles for reform. Those aspects of Marshall's ideas, best summarized in his classic 1949 address, “Citizenship and Social Class”, with the greatest resonance for modern social theorists revolve around the relationship between citizenship, rights and markets. For Marshall, “the universal status of citizenship” was a plane of equality such that “all who possess the status (of citizenship) are equal with respect to the rights and duties with which the status is endowed”. Rights were embodied in a common culture and enforced by state power. Marshall believed that, gradually, one particular kind of rights, “social rights”, would come to limit the power of the market. While markets would continue to exist and to generate social inequality, government redistribution would increasingly expand the plane of equality to include the most important aspects of material and cultural life. The distinctive feature of these social rights according to Marshall is that they were not exemptions, privileges or paternalistic solicitude for those excluded from what he labels the “national community”, but social rights were benefits given to members of the community to encourage and facilitate their continued participation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1995

References

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55 Mink, Gwendolyn, Old Labor and New Immigrants in American Political Development: Union, Party and State, 1875–1920 (Ithaca, NY, 1986)Google Scholar. At the end of the nineteenth, and during the early twentieth, century the National Labor Tribune, the Pittsburgh labor weekly put out by AFL unions, ran a limited number of stories on national news which they believed were relevant for their readers – the fate of legislation on industrial protectionism, efforts to elevate standards of children's education, mothers' pensions, protective hours legislation for women and immigration restriction.

56 On steel, see Brody, Labor in Crisis; Daniel Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, p. 47. See also Fitch, The Steel Workers, The Pittsburgh Survey 2, Appendix II, for rules and regulations of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers with respect to benefits, especially pp. 270–277. On the unions' suspicion of the employers' motives for offering benefits, see chapters XV and XVI.

57 See Salvatore, Nick, “Some Thoughts on Class and Citizenship in the Late Nineteenth Century”, in Debouzy, Marianne (ed.), In the Shadow of the Statue of Liberty: Immigrants, Workers and Citizens in the American Republic, 1880–1920 (Urbana, 1992), pp. 211228Google Scholar and Catherine Collamp, “Union, Civics and National Identity: Organized Labor's Reaction to Immigration, 1881–1897”, in In the Shadow of the Statue, pp. 229–255.

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59 SeeIbid. This partly explains th e tone surrounding the discussion of new immigrants in the famous US Immigration Commission reports made to the Congress in 1910.

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79 Griffiths, James, Pages from Memory (London, 1969), p. 84Google Scholar. The problem was that it proved impossible to reconcile “bringing everyone in “ with Beveridge's other principles, with his plan's commitment to equal benefits for all interruptions of earnings, flat rate payments and flat rate benefits, and a basic subsistence income: Harris, José, “Social Planning in War-time: Some Aspects of the Beveridge Report”, in War and Economic Development: Essays in Memory of David Joslin (Cambridge, 1973), pp. 239256Google Scholar. In the end they were not all brought in and those who were not brought in did not receive a subsistence income. Unlike almost every other category of worker, married women who returned to work were not required to contribute and were not paid full benefits if they did. Unmarried mothers were not eligible for insurance benefits, and Beveridge even proposed that separated or divorced women should only be eligible for benefits if the marriage breakdown was in no way their fault: Wilson, Elizabeth, Women and the Welfare State (London, 1977), pp. 149151Google Scholar.

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96 See ibid., p. 143. See also Jacoby, “Employers and the Welfare State”, p. 536.

97 See, for example, the National Industrial Conference Board's endorsement of corporate schemes, and admonition against government programs in the 1931 report, Unemployment Benefits and Insurance, “Summary and Conclusions”, pp. 117–127.

98 See Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, pp. 141–145; Jacoby, “Employers and the Welfare State”, pp. 538–541.

99 See Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, pp. 142, 143.

100 See ibid., p. 143; Jacoby, “Employers and the Welfare State”, p. 538; Fraser, Labor Will Rule, ch. 10.

101 Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, p. 155.

102 See ibid., p. 156; Fraser, Labor Will Rule, p. 278.

103 See Casebeer, Kenneth, “The Worker's Unemployment Insurance Bill: American Social Wage, Labor Organization, and Legal Ideology”, in Tomlin, Christopher L. and King, Andrew J., Labor Law in America: Historical and Critical Essays (Baltimore, 1990), pp. 231259Google Scholar, espedally pp. 232 and 245; Montgomery, David, “Labor and the Political Leadership of New Deal America”, International Review of Social History, 39 (1994), pp. 348349CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

104 See Casebeer, “The Worker's Unemployment Insurance Bill”, pp. 238, 248.

105 Nelson, Unemployment Insurance; Lubove, The Struggle, p. 171.

106 Fraser, Labor Will Rule, pp. 273, 274.

107 See Montgomery, “Labor and the Political Leadership”, pp. 347–353; Gordon, New Deals, ch. 7. For recent interpretations which conclude that labor was able to influence and benefit from New Deal legislation in meaningful ways, see Dubovsky, Melvyn, The State and Labor in Modern America (Chapel Hill, 1994)Google Scholar; Cohen, Lisabeth, Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919–1939 (Cambridge, 1990)Google Scholar.

108 “Constitution and Platform: Unemployed Citizens' League of Allegheny County”, preamble, p. 2 (Archives of Industrial Society, University of Pittsburgh).

109 Along these lines it is important to note, as Kenneth Casebeer points out, that the only substantive difference between the Trade Union Councils radical insurance bill and the version introduced in Congress by Lundeen was that, in the Congressman's version, workers benefits were limited to American citizens. “The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill”, p. 248.

110 On the discriminatory effects of unemployment insurance policy as it was embodied in the Social Security Act see, among others, Nelson, Barbara, “The Origins of the Two-Channel Welfare State: Workmen's Compensation and Mothers' Aid”, in Gordon, Linda (ed.), Women, the State and Welfare (Madison, 1990), pp. 123151Google Scholarand Pearce, Diana M., “Toil and Trouble: Women Workers and Unemployment Compensation”, Signs, 10 (Spring 1985), pp. 439459Google Scholar. Alice Kessler-Harris has recently shown that the Social Security Amendments of 1939, which provided pension benefits for widows, were designed to reinforce traditional gender roles, with additional money being rewarded to mostly white, male pensioners, to cover their wives in widowhood, rather than through extended greater benefits to female wage earners, or, for that matter, by broadening the categories of workers covered by social security in the jobs heavily dominated by women and minorities. See “Designing Women and Old Fools: The Construction of the Social Security Amendments of 1939”, in Kerber, Linda, Kessler-Harris, Alice and Sklar, Kathryn Kish (eds), U.S. History as Women's History: New Feminist Essays (Chapel Hill, 1995), pp. 87104Google Scholar. While Kessler-Harris argues that this is evidence of the way in which gendered policies were used not as a surrogate for class, as Kathryn Sklar has argued (see “Two Political Cultures”, in U.S. History As Women's History, p. 41), but as a vehicle for weakening efforts to broaden coverage of the working class and of minorities. One could argue that class power still remained salient, since those who reaped the benefits were the families among organized labor, along with others covered by social security pensions. In European countries, with stronger class movements, widows' pensions were handled in the same manner – by increasing benefits of married men to cover their wives.

111 Skocpol, Protecting Soldiers and Mothers. especially part 2 and the Conclusion.

112 See ibid., part 2. See also Lubove, The Struggle', Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, ch. 6.

113 Seeibid.

114 Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Labor and Industry, Unemployment Compensation Law, 1 December 1938; Van Fleet, Josephine, “An Appraisal of the United States-Pennsylvania Unemployment Compensation Program” (M.A., University of Pittsburgh, 1938), pp. 2Google Scholar, 3; Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, pp. 189, 190.

115 See Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, ch. 9; Lubove, The Struggle, Conclusion.

116 Nelson, Unemployment Insurance, p. 209.

117 National Resources Planning Board, Security, Work and Relief Policies (Washington, 1942), p. 70Google Scholar. Marion Folsom was dismayed to discover that in New York, Kodak would have to live under conditions closer to the Ohio scheme, rather than the more business-oriented Wisconsin plan. See Jacoby, “Employers and the Welfare State”, p. 541.

118 Laclau, Ernesto and Mouffe, Chantal, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Towards a Radical Democratic Politics (London, 1985)Google Scholar; Mouffe, Chantal (ed.), Dimensions of Radical Democracy: Pluralism, Citizenship, and Community (London, 1992)Google Scholar and Mouffe, Chantal, The Return of the Political (London, 1993)Google Scholar. See also Aronowitz, Stanley, “The Situation of the Left in the United States”, Socialist Review, 23 (1993), pp. 580Google Scholar, and the responses to these, particularly those by Ehrenreich, Epstein, Flacks and Zaretsky. Scholars who have been influenced by Marshall include: Hollifield, James F., Immigrants, Markets and States; The Political Economy of Postwar Europe (Cambridge, MA, 1992)Google Scholar; Offe, Claus, “A Non-Productivist Design for Social Policies”, in Coenen, Harry and Leisink, Peter (eds), Work and Citizenship in the New Europe (Cambridge, 1993), pp. 215232Google Scholar; Roche, Maurice, Rethinking Citizenship: Welfare, Ideology and Change in Modern Europe (Cambridge, 1992)Google Scholar; and Turner, Bryan, Citizenship and Capitalism: The Debate over Reformism (London, 1986)Google Scholar.

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120 Mouffe, “Feminism, Citizenship and Politics”, in The Return of the Political, p. 84.

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122 The most complete discussion of how these factors combined to leave women vulnerable in the construction of social security benefits can be found in Gordon, Linda, Pitied But Not Entitled: Single Women and the History of Welfare (New York, 1994), chs 7–9Google Scholar.

123 On migration to England from the Irish Republic, see Kathleen Paul, “A Case of Mistaken Identity: The Irish in Post-War Britain”, International Labor and Working-Class History (forthcoming).

124 See Meehan, Elizabeth, Citizenship and the European Community (London, 1993)Google Scholar.

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