Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France
What constitutes a need? Who gets to decide what people do or do not need? In modern France, scientists, both amateur and professional, were engaged in defining and measuring human needs. These scientists did not trust in a providential economy to distribute the fruits of labor and uphold the social order. Rather, they believed that social organization should be actively directed according to scientific principles. They grounded their study of human needs on quantifiable foundations: agricultural and physiological experiments, demographic studies, and statistics.

The result was the concept of the "vital minimum"—the living wage, a measure of physical and social needs. In this book, Dana Simmons traces the history of this concept, revealing the intersections between technologies of measurement, such as calorimeters and social surveys, and technologies of wages and welfare, such as minimum wages, poor aid, and welfare programs. In looking at how we define and measure need, Vital Minimum raises profound questions about the authority of nature and the nature of inequality.
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Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France
What constitutes a need? Who gets to decide what people do or do not need? In modern France, scientists, both amateur and professional, were engaged in defining and measuring human needs. These scientists did not trust in a providential economy to distribute the fruits of labor and uphold the social order. Rather, they believed that social organization should be actively directed according to scientific principles. They grounded their study of human needs on quantifiable foundations: agricultural and physiological experiments, demographic studies, and statistics.

The result was the concept of the "vital minimum"—the living wage, a measure of physical and social needs. In this book, Dana Simmons traces the history of this concept, revealing the intersections between technologies of measurement, such as calorimeters and social surveys, and technologies of wages and welfare, such as minimum wages, poor aid, and welfare programs. In looking at how we define and measure need, Vital Minimum raises profound questions about the authority of nature and the nature of inequality.
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Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France

Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France

by Dana Simmons
Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France

Vital Minimum: Need, Science, and Politics in Modern France

by Dana Simmons

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

What constitutes a need? Who gets to decide what people do or do not need? In modern France, scientists, both amateur and professional, were engaged in defining and measuring human needs. These scientists did not trust in a providential economy to distribute the fruits of labor and uphold the social order. Rather, they believed that social organization should be actively directed according to scientific principles. They grounded their study of human needs on quantifiable foundations: agricultural and physiological experiments, demographic studies, and statistics.

The result was the concept of the "vital minimum"—the living wage, a measure of physical and social needs. In this book, Dana Simmons traces the history of this concept, revealing the intersections between technologies of measurement, such as calorimeters and social surveys, and technologies of wages and welfare, such as minimum wages, poor aid, and welfare programs. In looking at how we define and measure need, Vital Minimum raises profound questions about the authority of nature and the nature of inequality.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226251561
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 07/13/2015
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Dana Simmons is associate professor of history at the University of California, Riverside.

Table of Contents

1          Introduction

2          Subsistence
Pigs on a balance
Scarcity
Bread and meat
Recycling and reproduction

3          Social Reform
Scale balances
Air rations
Maintenance rations

4          Family, Race, Type
Welfare and comparative zoology
Family and race
Socialism and statistics

5          Citizens
Useless mouths, get out!
Meat or bread

6          Vital Wages
Socialism, statistics, and the iron law
The fever of needs
Vital wages

7          Science of Man
Biosocial economics
Rationing
The vital minimum wage
The science of man after 1945

8          Human Persons
Incompressible needs and the SMIG
Human persons
An impossible standard

9          Need, Nature, and Society
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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