HomeCivic Engagement: Social Science and Progressive-Era Reform in New York City
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Civic Engagement: Social Science and Progressive-Era Reform in New York City

Regular price $57.86 USD
Regular price Sale price $57.86 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
In Stock
Weight

About this book

John Recchiuti recounts the history of a vibrant network of young American scholars and social activists who helped transform a city and a nation. New York in the late Gilded Age and Progressive Era was the nations financial capital its principal hub for immigration and its premier center for the arts. It was also a center of civic engagement: most of the nations main reform organizations were headquartered there. As public intellectuals members of the citys social science network championed the fight for civil rights through the NAACP and National Urban League; sought solutions to labor problems through the American Association for Labor Legislation National Consumers League and National Child Labor Committee; founded the nations first settlement houses; and established the first center for social science and social work the New York School of Philanthropy. In New York which one group of social scientists called "the greatest social science laboratory in the world " these men and women lived and worked in Greenwich Villages working-class haunts amid immigrant poverty on the Lower East Side and on Columbia Universitys Upper West Side campus. They debated how much government should regulate laissez-faire capitalism whether poverty was caused by individual character flaws and how through the New York Bureau of Municipal Research to thwart municipal corruption. Some promulgated a racist eugenics while others fought racism in the name of social science. And in their reach for leadership they confronted an essential question: was social science to be the herald of a reinvigorated democracy or an instrument of technocracy? In this deeply researched study Recchiuti focuses on more than a score of Progressive reformers including Florence Kelley W. E. B. Du Bois E. R. A. Seligman Charles Beard Franz Boaz Frances Perkins Samuel Lindsay Edward Devine Mary Simkhovitch and George Edmund Haynes. He reminds us how people from markedly diverse backgrounds forged a movement to change a city and beyond it a nation.