68 results

  • Subject is exactly "Addams, Jane, views on social work"
REEL 46_0924.jpg

Addams discusses the problems that charity workers face when they bring middle-class assumptions about the poor to their efforts to practically help them.
School Halls to be Social Centers, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Feb. 24, 1902, p. 3..jpg

Addams discusses the role of neighborhood centers can play in fostering community.
JAPA-1037-01.jpg

Addams discusses the settlement house's role as a charity and the means by which it appeals to the poor. She spoke at the Decatur Chautauqua.
JAPA-1477-01.jpg

Addams discusses the need to understand the poor in order to solve the problems of poverty.
JAPA-1048-02.jpg

Addams discusses efforts made to reach the needy through settlement work. She delivered this speech at the annual meeting of the Associated Charities.
JAPA0337.jpg

Addams speaks to the North Broadway Social Settlement about how she runs Hull-House.
REEL 46_1395.jpg

An extract of Addams' discussion of day nurseries, and their impact on poor families.
JAPA-0987-01.JPG

Addams reports on efforts of women in creating exhibits that discussed British efforts to provide adequate housing for impoverished families.
JAPA-1800-01.JPG

Addams reports on efforts of women in creating exhibits that discussed social economy compared to the Paris Exhibition in 1900.
JAPA-0436.JPG

A short quote by Addams on social ethics.
REEL 46_1739.jpg

Addams compares the United States' treatment of women and children in labor to the ways of European countries. This speech was given at public meeting associated with the Conference on the Care of Dependent Children, in Washington, D.C. on January 25, 1909.
REEL 46_1801.jpg

Printed version of Addams' Presidential Address at the National Conference on Charities and Correction, held in St. Louis on May 19-26. Addams reviews the history of charity work and the challenges ahead. She gives examples from her experiences at Hull-House and others.
REEL 46_1856.jpg

Addams' Presidential Address at the National Conference on Charities and Correction, held in St. Louis on May 19-26. Addams reviews the history of charity work and the challenges ahead. She gives examples from her experiences at Hull-House and others.
REEL 47_0022.jpg

Printed version of Addams' Presidential Address at the National Conference on Charities and Correction, held in St. Louis on May 19-26. Addams reviews the history of charity work and the challenges ahead. She gives examples from her experiences at Hull-House and others.
JAPA-0466-04.jpg

Newspaper report of Addams' speech at the conference of Charities and Correction in St. Louis discussing state of charitable work.
REEL 47_0010.jpg

Addams writes about finding a location for her settlement and the early days of settling into the neighborhood and developing the ideas for their work. This is the third of six articles excerpted from Twenty Years at Hull-House.
JAPA-0930-01.jpg

In an interview with James Evan Crown, Addams discusses the impact that woman suffrage is having on society. Addams later denied having taken part in this interview, specifically her comments on the poor.
REEL 47_0079.jpg

In this speech to the National Conference on Charities and Correction meeting in Boston, Addams discusses the qualities that attract people to social work as an occupation and as a way of life, dedicated to the greater good of society.
REEL 47_0354.jpg

Page proofs of "Chapter V: Social Control," the final article in a five-part series, which would ultimately be published as A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil later in the year.
REEL 47_0362.jpg

Addams discusses how social movements can help alleviate vice, providing examples such as crusades against diseases and organized opposition to the white slave trade. This is the final article in a five-part series, which would ultimately be published as A New Conscience and an Ancient Evil later in the year.
REEL 47_0370.jpg

Addams discusses the weakness of civil service as a force for humanitarianism, detailing the shortcomings of the public takeover of efforts that were previously in the domain of private individuals and charities.
REEL 47_0380.jpg

Addams discusses the weakness of civil service as a force for humanitarianism, detailing the shortcomings of the public takeover of efforts that were previously in the domain of private individuals and charities.
REEL 47_0083.jpg

In this forward in The Child in the City: A Handbook of the Child Welfare Exhibit at the Coliseum, Addams explains the impact of the Child Welfare Exhibit in New York and praises the generosity of Harriet McCormick for bringing the exhibit to Chicago.
REEL 47_0568.jpg

Addams discusses elections and the role of partisan politics, arguing that political pragmatism is required for social action.
REEL 47_0651.jpg

Addams' keynote address before the National American Woman Suffrage Association meeting in Philadelphia argues that women must have the ballot in order to maintain their moral and familial role for the betterment of society.