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"There are few subjects in political economy of greater difficulty": The Poor laws of the Antebellum South
Authors:James W Ely  Jr
Institution:James w. Ely, Jr.;is professor of law, Vanderbilt University. B.A. 1959, Princeton University;LL.B 1962, Harvard Law School;M.A. 1968, Ph.D. 1971, University of Virginia.
Abstract:This article examines the administration of the poor laws in six southern states from 1800 to 1860. Although southerners were influenced to some degree by developments in northeastern communities, the unique features of antebellum southern life caused poor relief to assume a distinct character. Poverty was simply not perceived as a major concern in the South. Consequently, southerners were less inclined to stigmatize paupers, or to adopt a systematic policy of institutionalizing dependents. They relied heavily on such traditional practices as outrelief and apprenticeship. This approach harmonized with the southern preference for a legal system which encouraged informal solution of social problems at the local level.
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