2019
DOI: 10.1017/s0268416019000353
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District schools and the erosion of parental rights under the Poor Law: a case study from London (1889–1899)

Abstract: This article investigates the empirical backing for the claim that poor law officials needed legal authority to refuse poor parents’ right to the custody of their children in order to stabilise children's welfare institutions during the nineteenth century. Although workhouses were capable of accommodating children, Victorian lawmakers feared children would model themselves on adult paupers to become permanent burdens on the state. To tackle this problem, a system of children's welfare institutions called ‘dist… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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