Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics
Contemporaries of Carroll D. Wright (1840-1909) lived through the transformation of American society by the industrial revolution. For the most part they thought the transformation represented growth and progress, but many also found occasion for doubt and fear in its consequences. Their anxieties collected around the notions of a "labor problem" and "labor reform." Whether from hope or fear, people felt a need for statistical information. On this popular demand Wright built his career as statistical expert and renowned master of "labor statistics." His investigations during thirty-two years of government service (1873-1905) gave form to contemporary ideas and set precedents for modern procedures, as in his seminal studies of wages, prices, and strikes.

In telling how Wright took up this unprecedented career, Mr. Leiby shows the importance of Wright's early years and relates his work to the politics and religion of his time as well as to its social science. In this perspective, the history of the labor bureaus and their voluminous reports take on their original human purposes and meaning.

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Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics
Contemporaries of Carroll D. Wright (1840-1909) lived through the transformation of American society by the industrial revolution. For the most part they thought the transformation represented growth and progress, but many also found occasion for doubt and fear in its consequences. Their anxieties collected around the notions of a "labor problem" and "labor reform." Whether from hope or fear, people felt a need for statistical information. On this popular demand Wright built his career as statistical expert and renowned master of "labor statistics." His investigations during thirty-two years of government service (1873-1905) gave form to contemporary ideas and set precedents for modern procedures, as in his seminal studies of wages, prices, and strikes.

In telling how Wright took up this unprecedented career, Mr. Leiby shows the importance of Wright's early years and relates his work to the politics and religion of his time as well as to its social science. In this perspective, the history of the labor bureaus and their voluminous reports take on their original human purposes and meaning.

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Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics

Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics

by James Leiby
Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics

Carroll Wright and Labor Reform: The Origin of Labor Statistics

by James Leiby

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Overview

Contemporaries of Carroll D. Wright (1840-1909) lived through the transformation of American society by the industrial revolution. For the most part they thought the transformation represented growth and progress, but many also found occasion for doubt and fear in its consequences. Their anxieties collected around the notions of a "labor problem" and "labor reform." Whether from hope or fear, people felt a need for statistical information. On this popular demand Wright built his career as statistical expert and renowned master of "labor statistics." His investigations during thirty-two years of government service (1873-1905) gave form to contemporary ideas and set precedents for modern procedures, as in his seminal studies of wages, prices, and strikes.

In telling how Wright took up this unprecedented career, Mr. Leiby shows the importance of Wright's early years and relates his work to the politics and religion of his time as well as to its social science. In this perspective, the history of the labor bureaus and their voluminous reports take on their original human purposes and meaning.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674098008
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 01/01/1960
Series: Harvard Historical Monographs , #46
Pages: 257
Product dimensions: 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

James Leiby was Professor Emeritus of Social Welfare at the University of California, Berkeley.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Early Life and Influences

2. Life in Reading: Political Aspirations

3. Labor Reform and the Origin of Labor Statistics

4. The Evolution of the Labor Bureaus

5. Wright's Statistical Investigations

6. Labor Reforms and Industrial Disputes

7. The Altruistic Spirit of the Age

Note on Sources

Selected Bibliography

Bibliography of Publications Written or Directed by Carroll D. Wright

Index

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