Evolution of National Insurance
The Origins of the Welfare State
By (author) Bentley B Gilbert, Research Professor Pat Thane

Publication date:
30 September 2018Publisher
Edward Everett RootISBN-13: 9781912224388
Professor Gilbert's extensive researches provided much new material, for the history of how the British government created the physical, educational and welfare institutions in response to the problems of poverty and access to essential services.
This is the standard guide to this key area of public policy. It provides an analytical account of the legislative experiments by which British governments sought to provide citizens with the physical, educational and welfare institutions that became the basis of modern British systems.
The important social innovation was social insurance, which became the basic mechanism for the British welfare state and the social security framework of the United States.
Professor Gilbert's extensive researches provided much new material, for the history of how the British government created the physical, educational and welfare institutions in response to the problems of poverty and access to essential services.
It remains the key commentary on the history of British social legislation down to the outbreak of the Great War, and for its subsequent implications.
"This tightly packed, scholarly volume offers us by far the best account available of the late Victorian and Edwardian origins of what later was to be called 'the welfare state'." - Professor Asa Briggs, Political Science Quarterly.
"The best books on the launching of National Health Insurance are, unquestionably, Lloyd George's Ambulance Wagon by W.J. Braithwaite and The Evolution of National Insurance in Great Britain. The Origins of the Welfare State by Bentley B. Gilbert." - John Grigg.
"Pat Thane is a distinguished historian of modern Britain." - James Cronin, Boston College.