Parenting, poverty and the NSPCC in Ireland, 1889–1939
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2017Author
Buckley, Sarah-Anne
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Buckley, Sarah-Anne. (2017). Parenting, Poverty and the NSPCC in Ireland, 1889–1939. In Hester Barron & Claudia Siebrecht (Eds.), Parenting and the State in Britain and Europe, c. 1870-1950 Raising the Nation: Palgrave Macmillan.
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Abstract
This chapter addresses a number of key questions surrounding parenting, poverty and the state in Ireland from 1889 to 1939.1 Concentrating on the period from the opening of the first Irish branch of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) to the beginning of the Second World War, it highlights international concerns involving child protection, parenting, and the state, as well as specific Irish anxieties surrounding class, gender, emigration, sexuality and the family. This was an era in which parenting was increasingly seen as national duty, and, as Harry Hendrick has asserted in a broader history of child welfare and the NSPCC in Britain, ‘“Civilised” parenting, especially by the Irish and the poor, was testimony to progress.