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Price V. Fishback and Shawn Everett Kantor

A Prelude to the Welfare State

The Origins of Workers' Compensation

324 pages, 27 tables  6 x 9  © 2000
Series: National Bureau of Economic Research Series on Long-Term Factors in Economic Development

Cloth $48.00

ISBN: 9780226251639   Published May 2000

E Book from $5.00 to $26.00 (about ebooks)

ISBN: 9780226251646

Paper $26.00

ISBN: 9780226249841   Published June 2006

Workers' compensation was arguably the first widespread social insurance program in the United States and the most successful form of labor legislation to emerge from the early Progressive Movement. Adopted in most states between 1910 and 1920, workers' compensation laws have been paving seen as the way for social security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, and eventually the broad network of social welfare programs we have today.

In this highly original and persuasive work, Price V. Fishback and Shawn Everett Kantor challenge widespread historical perceptions, arguing that, rather than being an early progressive victory, workers' compensation succeeded because all relevant parties—labor and management, insurance companies, lawyers, and legislators—benefited from the legislation. Thorough, rigorous, and convincing, A Prelude to the Welfare State: The Origins of Workers' Compensation is a major reappraisal of the causes and consequences of a movement that ultimately transformed the nature of social insurance and the American workplace.
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