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Eveline M. Burns

Bio: Eveline M. Burns is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social security & Economic security. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 14 publications receiving 132 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

36 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1949

15 citations

Book
01 Jan 1949

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1957

10 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The case studies of the policy-making process constitute one of the more important methods of political science analysis as discussed by the authors, and they have varied in subject-matter and format, in scope and rigor, but they form a distinguishable body of literature which continues to grow year by year.
Abstract: Case-Studies of the policy-making process constitute one of the more important methods of political science analysis. Beginning with Schattschneider, Herring, and others in the 1930's, case-studies have been conducted on a great variety of decisions. They have varied in subject-matter and format, in scope and rigor, but they form a distinguishable body of literature which continues to grow year by year. The most recent addition, a book-length study by Raymond Bauer and his associates, stands with Robert A. Dahl's prize-winning Who Governs? (New Haven 1961) as the best yet to appear. With its publication a new level of sophistication has been reached. The standards of research its authors have set will indeed be difficult to uphold in the future. American Business and Public Policy is an analysis of political relationships within the context of a single, well-defined issue—foreign trade. It is an analysis of business attitudes, strategies, communications and, through these, business relationships in politics. The analysis makes use of the best behavioral research techniques without losing sight of the rich context of policies, traditions, and institutions. Thus, it does not, in Dahl's words, exchange relevance for rigor; rather it is standing proof that the two—relevance and rigor—are not mutually exclusive goals.

2,137 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use diffusion models to examine how both sets of processes affected the rate of enactment of work requirements and find that work requirements diffused among states that were culturally and/or institutionally linked.
Abstract: Displeased with the increasing expenditures on ADC/AFDC and the changing demographic composition of the recipient population, state managers between 1950 and 1967 attempted to restrict the program. One way this was accomplished was through enacting work requirements as a condition of eligibility. Temporal variation in the enactment may be explained through a synthesis of two theoretical traditions on policy development: the intrastate and interstate approaches. The authors use diffusion models to examine how both sets of processes affected the rate of enactment of work requirements. States reformed AFDC programs in response to their own internal problem pressures. But this did not happen in a vacuum; work requirements diffused among states that were culturally and/ or institutionally linked.

145 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article revisited the institutional approach to US social policy by reconsidering key aspects of the genesis of the American welfare state, showing that concepts such as policy feedback and path dependence need to be extended to encompass the effect of private social policies and taking policy paradigms and agenda setting more seriously than is the norm in institutional scholarship.
Abstract: Traditional theories of welfare state development divide into two camps: societal accounts and institutional accounts. The aim of the present article is to amend and enrich the institutional approach to US social policy by reconsidering key aspects of the genesis of the American welfare state: 1) showing that concepts such as ‘policy feedback’ and ‘path dependence’ need to be extended to encompass the effect of private social policies; and 2) taking policy paradigms and agenda setting more seriously than is the norm in institutional scholarship. The empirical analysis is divided into two parts. The first part explores the activities of the American Association for Labor Legislation (AALL) in the decade beginning in 1910 and the genesis of Social Security in the 1930s, while the second part examines the effect of the private benefit developments on policy choices between 1935 and 1965.

133 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: The main objective of income support is the relief of poverty; however, there is considerable disagreement about the proper role of income maintenance, but it remains widely accepted that the abolition of poverty is a central objective as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Publisher Summary Historically, income maintenance has taken the form of private charity or the poor law. These have been typically uneven in their impact, varying from locality to locality, and have been dependent on the generosity and caprices of donors or public relief officials. In the administration of state support, concern for the cost has been paramount, and there has been a lively sense of the possible disincentive to work. The main objective of income support is the relief of poverty. It has been an intermediate objective rather than an end in itself, for example, to avoid civil unrest. Today, there is considerable disagreement about the proper role of income maintenance, but it remains widely accepted that the abolition of poverty is a central objective. The second approach seeks to reduce the multiple values to a single indicator by taking total expenditure and comparing this with a target level of total outlay. The third approach takes total income as the variable to indicate poverty; and it is this approach that is most commonly employed in the studies of poverty. In considering these three approaches to the indicator of poverty, there are two different conceptions. The first, and perhaps the more usual, is concerned with the standard of living, and it points to the use of total expenditure or the consumption of specific commodities. The second is concerned with rights to a minimum level of resources or the opportunity to consume, even if not exercised.

122 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: A review of the economic status of the elderly and the sources of income in old age can be found in this paper, where the authors highlight the most important areas of research in the literature on aging.
Abstract: The continuation of low rates of fertility and reductions in mortality rates of the elderly have revived the interest of economists in the examination of the economic impacts of aging populations. These concerns combined with the analysis of the income status of the elderly and their activities from the broad framework of the economics of aging. The rapid growth of support programs for the aged also has been the focus of considerable economic analysis. This review highlights the most important areas of research in the literature on aging. The first section discusses the determinants of population age structure changes and their impact on the size and composition of the dependent groups. The following section provides a review of the economic status of the elderly and the sources of income in old age. Section III incorporates the economic characteristics of the elderly into a life-cycle context while Section IV examines the empirical evidence concerning labor supply decisions of the aged. Social Security and private pensions and their influence on the economy are analyzed in Section V. The final section of this article reviews evidence on the interaction between aging and macroeconomic variables. (excerpt)

97 citations