The Tragedy of American Compassion

The fifteenth anniversary reissue of this groundbreaking book has a new foreword and preface to encourage a historically and biblically based approach to welfare.

1102506157
The Tragedy of American Compassion

The fifteenth anniversary reissue of this groundbreaking book has a new foreword and preface to encourage a historically and biblically based approach to welfare.

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The Tragedy of American Compassion

The Tragedy of American Compassion

The Tragedy of American Compassion

The Tragedy of American Compassion

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Overview

The fifteenth anniversary reissue of this groundbreaking book has a new foreword and preface to encourage a historically and biblically based approach to welfare.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781433501104
Publisher: Crossway
Publication date: 03/31/2008
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 185,269
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Marvin Olasky (PhD, University of Michigan) is the editor in chief of World magazine, holder of the distinguished chair in journalism and public policy at Patrick Henry College, and senior fellow of the Acton Institute. He was previously a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, a Boston Globe reporter, and a Du Pont Company speechwriter. He is the author of twenty books and more than 3,500 articles. He and his wife, Susan, have four sons.

Amy L. Sherman (PhD, University of Virginia) is a senior fellow at the Sagamore Institute for Policy Research, where she directs the Center on Faith in Communities. She is the author of six books and over eighty articles in a variety of periodicals. Sherman has served for several years as a senior fellow with the International Justice Mission’s Institute for Biblical Justice.

Table of Contents

Foreword   Amy L. Sherman     vii
Preface     xiii
Acknowledgments     xvii
Introduction: The Current Impasse     3
The Early American Model of Compassion     6
Turning Cities into Countryside     24
First Challenge to the Charity     42
The Social Darwinist Threat     60
Proving Social Darwinism Wrong     80
The Seven Marks of Compassion     99
And Why Not Do More?     116
Excitement of a New Century     134
Selling New Deals, Old Wineskins     151
Revolution-and Its Heartbreak     167
Questions of the 1970s and the 1980s     184
Putting Compassion into Practice     200
Applying History     217
Endnotes     235
Index     291

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"One of the 50 most influential policy books of all time."
Policy.comPolicy.com

"A richly documented, controversial history of the welfare state."
Publisher's Weekly

"Significant changes in government social welfare policy have unfolded since The Tragedy of American Compassion emerged in 1992-just think about the paradigm-shifting federal welfare reform of 1996. Both the book's critics and its promoters would argue that Olasky's ideas mattered and gave shape, to some degree, to some of those changes."
Amy L. Sherman, Senior Fellow, Sagamore Institute for Policy Research; author, Kingdom Calling: Vocational Stewardship for the Common Good

"Those who read and understand Olasky's work will be better prepared to move creatively in affirming the dignity of the poor, and in affirming work as a virtue."
John M. Perkins, President, John M. Perkins Foundation for Reconciliation and Development

"For domestic policy understanding, no better book recommends itself than Marvin Olasky's splendid The Tragedy of American Compassion."
Orange County RegisterOrange County Register

"One of 'eight books that changed America.'"
Philanthropy Philanthropy

"Illuminating."
Colorado Gazette-TelegraphColorado Gazette-Telegraph

"Fascinating."
Wall Street JournalWall Street Journal

"There is no disagreement between liberals and conservatives about whether to help the lot of the poor, but there is grave disagreement about how to help them, especially because the wrong kind of 'help' is more likely to harm. In The Tragedy of American Compassion, Marvin Olasky shows that although government can assist the merciful efforts of persons, organizations, and communities of faith, it cannot take their place."
J. Budziszewski, Professor of Government and Philosophy, University of Texas at Austin; Author of What We Can't Not Know: A Guide

"A comprehensive, well documented, and much needed study of the decline of true compassion that provides fresh analysis and provocative insight into the causes and cures of this American tragedy. Must reading for people who want to understand and help correct the plight of hurting people."
Anthony T. Evans, Founder, The Urban Alternative

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