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The Vagrancy Problem. / The Case for Measures of Restraint for Tramps, Loafers, and Unemployables: With a Study of Continental Detention Colonies and Labour Houses cover

The Vagrancy Problem. / The Case for Measures of Restraint for Tramps, Loafers, and Unemployables: With a Study of Continental Detention Colonies and Labour Houses

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About This Book

The author examines the social problem of vagrancy and argues that England’s permissive approach is inadequate, advocating disciplined remedies drawn from continental practice. He describes urban loafers, detention colonies and labour houses, Belgian beggars’ depots, German labour houses and tramp prisons, a Berlin municipal labour house, Swiss treatment, Poor Law applications, labour depots and hostels, and recent commission recommendations. The work combines comparative institutional description, practical proposals for legislation and administration, and appendices of laws and forms to support measures intended to reduce habitual idleness through organised detention, work registration, and regulated labour accommodation.

About the Author

Dawson, William Harbutt portrait

William Harbutt Dawson

William Harbutt Dawson was a British author and social reformer known for his exploration of social issues related to vagrancy and unemployment. His notable work, "The Vagrancy Problem," presents a compelling case for measures of restraint for tramps, loafers, and unemployables, while also examining the practices of continental detention colonies and labor houses. Through his writing, Dawson contributed to the discourse on social welfare and the complexities of managing poverty in society, reflecting the challenges of his time.

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