| | Journal of Canadian Studies: Class and community in Canadian welfare work, 1933-1960 (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27) |
 | | Labour leaders' endorsement of chest campaigns simply accorded with values broadly held in the middle or on the right-wing end of the spectrum of working-class views on welfare work.(f.27) This is not to say that hostility towards private charity was absent from TLCC leaders' endorsements of community chest campaigns. |
 | | Charity leaders, drawn from elite capital and their family and professional associates, were depicted as standing for community cohesiveness, emotionally represented as "neighbourliness." Mainstream journalists and welfare experts described socialists and working-class critics of private charity as divisive, condemning them as outsiders. |
 | | Labour leaders, like their social work peers, valued and affirmed class difference, but it is significant that they used, rather than "balance," the term "equality" to talk about the political meanings of this difference. |
| www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_qa3683/is_199704/ai_n8769146 (10612 words) |