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The Old Poor Law in Scotland: The Experience of Poverty, 1574-1845. .


The Old Poor Law in Scotland: The Experience of Poverty, 1574-1845. By Rosalind Mitchison (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh University Press is a university publisher that is part of the University of Edinburgh in Edinburgh, Scotland. External links
  • Edinburgh University Press
, 2000. 246pp. $28.00/paperback).

The Scottish poor law The Scottish Poor Law described laws regarding poverty relief in Scotland during the 1800s and 1900s.

In Scotland the able-bodied poor had no automatic right to poor relief as in England.
 system long had a reputation as both more rigorous and more religious than that of the English system. During the nineteenth century, political economists and critics of the old English Old English: see type; English language; Anglo-Saxon literature.
Old English
 or Anglo-Saxon

Language spoken and written in England before AD 1100. It belongs to the Anglo-Frisian group of Germanic languages.
 poor law held up the Scottish system as an example. They applauded its reliance on voluntary charity, raised from the inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 of parishes, and administered through the kirk (Scottish church). They believed that the old poor law did not give anyone a right to relief, instead enshrining charity as a benevolent relationship among neighbors. And they held that the Scottish poor law refused relief to the able-bodied poor. This lack of rights was thought to encourage a greater independence among the Scottish poor. As Mitchison ascerbicly points out, however, these polemicists never explained why relief from voluntary charity would encourage more independence than relief from state aid.

Mitchison's extensive research into kirk sessions records reveals several misconceptions Misconceptions is an American sitcom television series for The WB Network for the 2005-2006 season that never aired. It features Jane Leeves, formerly of Frasier, and French Stewart, formerly of 3rd Rock From the Sun.  behind these arguments. First, poor relief depended on voluntary assessments from parish inhabitants because landowners, often absentee One who has left, either temporarily or permanently, his or her domicile or usual place of residence or business. A person beyond the geographical borders of a state who has not authorized an agent to represent him or her in legal proceedings that may be commenced against him or her , evaded assessments for poor relief. Second, the poor did have some right to relief and in fact sometimes went to court to enforce it. The decision Pollak vs Darling, 1804, enshrined this right, but it was ignored or denounced by many early nineteenth century commentators. Third, the old system occasionally granted some relief to the able-bodied, especially during times of famine or severe unemployment, all too common in Scotland's undeveloped early modern economy. Nonetheless, Mitchison stresses that the old Scottish system gave extremely inadequate relief to the poor, usually just some oatmeal, expecting them to beg in order to survive. She evens cites an instance when a parish stripped a five-year-old orphan of relief, telling her to take the roads to beg or work.

By the early nineteenth century, this system could not cope with the new economic situation of developing Scotland, with the extreme instability of the factory system and the clearances in the countryside. The splits in the kirk, culminating in the Disruption of 1843, meant that the church could not effectively organize relief (although she refutes R.A. Cage's claim that the Disruption impelled im·pel  
tr.v. im·pelled, im·pel·ling, im·pels
1. To urge to action through moral pressure; drive: I was impelled by events to take a stand.

2. To drive forward; propel.
 the Scottish Poor Law of 1845). The Rev. Thomas Chalmer's system of voluntary relief through urban kirks failed to solve the problem of working-class poverty. As a result, by 1845 the new Scottish Poor Law was passed, giving a new board of supervisors oversight over poor relief. Unfortunately, Mitchison does not explain the central provisions and practices of the new Scottish Poor Law.

Rosalind Mitchison's book on the Scottish poor law is the first to cover the period from the first Scottish enactment on the poor laws, to the establishment of a formal system in 1845. This book also goes into much detail on issues which will be of most interest to Scottish historians and of less use to historians of other areas. Although there is a useful glossary of Scots terms, the book does not explain abbreviations such as the OSA 1. OSA - Open Scripting Architecture.
2. OSA - Open System Architecture.
 and the NSA NSA
abbr.
National Security Agency

Noun 1. NSA - the United States cryptologic organization that coordinates and directs highly specialized activities to protect United States information systems and to produce foreign
 (Old and New Statistical Accounts of Scotland Statistical Accounts of Scotland are indispensable documents for the study of Scotland in the 18th and 19th Centuries. The most important are the “Old (or First) Statistical Account of Scotland ), and there are some minor repetitions, typographical errors typographical error - (typo) An error while inputting text via keyboard, made despite the fact that the user knows exactly what to type in. This usually results from the operator's inexperience at keyboarding, rushing, not paying attention, or carelessness.

Compare: mouso, thinko.
, and organizational lapses which better editing would have prevented. With the exception of the last chapter, she focuses more on the practices of poor relief in Scotland than the experiences of poverty.

Overall, The Old Poor Law in Scotland will prove valuable to historians of poor relief and social welfare in general, because it raises many issues prevalent in both nineteenth century social reform and today--whether there is a "right to relief, and whether voluntary, local, or religious charities can substitute for well-organized state aid.
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Author:Clark, Anna
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 2003
Words:623
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