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"welfare work" Definitions
  1. the efforts or programs of an agency, community, business organization, etc., to improve living conditions, increase job opportunities, secure hospitalization, and the like, for needy persons within its jurisdiction.

186 Sentences With "welfare work"

How to use welfare work in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "welfare work" and check conjugation/comparative form for "welfare work". Mastering all the usages of "welfare work" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Some states successfully showed how welfare work requirements help to lift families out of poverty.
The Salvation Army no longer does any welfare work on the island, as its contract was ended in February 2014 by the Australian government.
Each one curtails the governor's ability to make changes to Republican-backed policies like welfare work requirements, and political rules like campaign finance regulation.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced recently that it would no longer accept state applications for waiver of welfare work requirements.
Religious organizations who engage in child welfare work are certainly entitled to their religious viewpoints, and their religious beliefs are firmly protected under the First Amendment.
Richard, who grew up in the despised German Democratic Republic, brings his own experience as a second-class German to bear on his welfare work for a large group of fugitives from Libya.
After leaving his teaching job, he worked with Caribbean immigrant families in London, the basis for his second book, "Paid Servant: A Report About Welfare Work in London," published in Britain in 19693.
The Department blocked Ohio's application to support workforce programs through a request that the federal government waive some of the welfare work requirements on the same day that the Department announced they would no longer accept waiver requests.
" Lewis went on to accuse liberals of "declaring border walls immoral, but not infanticide" and wanting to "abolish [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] ICE, private health insurance, welfare work requirements, air travel, fossil fuels, the internal combustion engine, why, capitalism itself.
In 2014, The Daily Signal highlighted seven instances Obama ignored the law—three of them ignoring ACA—drawing from an extensive Heritage Foundation report detailing Obama's refusal to enforce laws governing labor, welfare work requirements, nuclear waste, appointments, education, voter fraud, immigration, and drugs.
Its child welfare work is funded by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (known as USCCB), the plaintiffs' lawyer explains, which receives millions of dollars in grant money to help two federal government programs: one for unaccompanied refugee minors and the other for unaccompanied alien children.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE (R-Kan.) echoed Meadows on that point: Republicans can't grow complacent.
Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, who helped write the welfare work requirements and who is a strong advocate for them in many more social welfare programs, said he does not think they are a good match for a health insurance program.
As chief executive, then, you have plenty of reasons to look after your staff's welfare: Work-life balance is a powerful recruiting tool, particularly for younger candidates; family-friendly policies encourage more women to join and stay; it is the right and equitable thing to do; and improving conditions cannot make things worse.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE, Ph.D., is president of The Heartland Institute, a nonpartisan, nonprofit research center headquartered in Arlington Heights, Illinois.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE, Ph.D., is president and CEO of The Heartland Institute, an independent national think tank headquartered in Arlington Heights, Illinois.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE (R-Kan.) now serves as the president of the conservative Heartland Institute and has been closely watching the right to try issue.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE (R-Kan.), a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, who lost his 2016 primary against a Republican rival who pitched himself as a more pragmatic choice.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE (R-Kan.), ostracized for years by Boehner and his allies, won a subcommittee gavel and a coveted spot on the powerful Speaker-aligned panel that picks committee chairmen.
Tim HuelskampTimothy (Tim) Alan HuelskampCure for cancer would become more likely if FDA streamlined the drug approval process Emails show climate change skeptics tout 'winning' under Trump Trump administration's reforms could make welfare work again MORE (R-Ky.), we have undertaken a major project to reform the current twentieth century-era FDA system that slows delivery and adds to the costs of the treatments cancer sufferers desperately require.
As Guy Sorman wrote for City Journal, the findings from these experiments ultimately became important to the national policy discussion under former President Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson Clinton3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 85033 Buckingham Palace: Any suggestion Prince Andrew was involved in Epstein scandal 'abhorrent' The magic of majority rule in elections MORE, who signed welfare work requirements into U.S. law in the 1990s.
In June 2000 Tin Shwe was Chairman of the MWJA Health and Welfare Work Committee.
More than 50 monks live at the temple and are engaged in education and social welfare work.
"Lady Muriel Paget: Welfare work at home and abroad", in The Times, Friday 17 June 1938, p. 18.
Besides functioning as a lending library, it also organises Dhamma talks, accredited Buddhist courses, public art exhibitions and welfare work locally and abroad.
Dorothy (1897–1967) was a prominent member of the Country Women's Association and was awarded the OBE for her welfare work during World War II.
In the 1962 Queen's Birthday Honours, Adams was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the community, especially in social welfare work.
In addition, the South African Legion of Military Veterans holds a street collection on the nearest Saturday to gather funds to assist in welfare work among military veterans.
Other variables that affect the labour supply decision, and can be readily incorporated into the model, include taxation, welfare, work environment, and income as a signal of ability or social contribution.
19, 41, 58, 67, 72, 106; not a Marxist: p.64; advanced industrial societies, pp. 69-82, 76 (art, language, libido, welfare, work; Nazi Germany and Nixon's America), 78-79; p.
The Central Tibetan Authority is not recognised as a sovereign government by any country, but it receives financial aid from governments and international organisations for its welfare work among the Tibetan exile community in India.
Oliver learns that Missy is a granddaughter of the owner of the factory in which she works, having assumed the role of factory girl to assist in welfare work. After an imitation honeymoon, Oliver and his heiress bride, who is his wife in name only, return home where Rupert and Cynthia Bawlf seek them out. Cynthia, falling ill, goes away for a rest. Rupert persuades Missy to assist him in his welfare work, and when she agrees, he attempts to force his attentions upon her again.
After the reunification, the whole complex was thoroughly restored. A museum was established, maintained by a Christian welfare work organisation. Today, it is also used for cultural events and for weddings in the restored castle chapel.
Green was awarded an Order of the British Empire for "services to welfare work" as part of the 2005 New Year Honours, where her work in the CPAG and membership of the National Employment Panel was recognised.
Mary believed that there should be a good balance of culture and welfare work in one's life. The cultural work that Mary did included being a member of the National Ballet Committee as she hoped to see development of ballet in Canada. She was also on the Opera Festival Women's Committee of Toronto and was appointed president of the committee in June 1958. The welfare work that Mary did included volunteering at the Toronto General Hospital, being a member of the Junior League, as well as being on the advisory board of the Women's Auxiliary.
In 1953, while he was an advisor to the Advisory Council of the Government of Tripura, Tripura welfare work was taken up by the Government. A Special Officer for Tribal Welfare was appointed and necessary fund allotted for the purpose. When he became the 1st Chief Minister of Tripura, he made special endeavour to upgrade the Tribal Welfare Office and give more attention to Tribal Jhumia Settlement and other tribal welfare work. In the General Election held in 1952 he was elected as a Member of Tripura Electoral College.
After 1918 the political mood became increasingly polarised, and Hüni was seen as representing the moderate right wing of the Social Democratic Party, and she lost influence. After 1924 he focus switched more completely to education and welfare work.
June Daphne Blundell, Lady Blundell (née Halligan, 19 June 1922 – 31 October 2012) was the wife of Sir Denis Blundell, former Governor-General of New Zealand. She was known in her own right for her extensive community activism and welfare work.
Kate Brew was born on October 22, 1873, in Hendersonville, Tennessee, the daughter of Patrick H. O'Gorman Brew (1821–1898) and Catherine "Kate" White (1841–1907). She took special training in child-welfare work at the Peabody College in Nashville.
In 1919 Julie Siegried was made a knight of the legion of honour in recognition, formally, of her work as president or founder of welfare support organisations and for war [welfare] work ("présidente ou fondatrice d’œuvres d'assistance ou d’œuvres de guerre").
Bramley, Leeds. RSPCA branches operate locally across England and Wales. Branches are separately registered charities operating at a local level and are run by volunteers. Some RSPCA branches are self-funding and raise money locally to support the animal welfare work they do.
Once she settled in she returned to her original home Central Methodist Church. Anna still fulfilled her civic and welfare work by visiting local hospitals and prisons to be an aid to those in need. She then gained the name "Mama Hall" in the Atlanta Community.
According to The Philadelphia Inquirer, "New Jersey Transit, prisons, state police, developmental centers, veterans' homes, mental hospitals, health and disease-prevention offices, child welfare, work on transportation safety, response to environmental contamination, [and] inspectors of amusement parks" were not affected by the order to shut down.
During her time in Africa, Welch established a strong reputation for herself. She was described by various commentators as enthusiastic, energetic and of having a passion and gift for welfare work. In particular she worked with local women to educate them in nursing and midwifery practice.
Pwee left the civil service to become an Executive Director of Medical Services International, a regional non-governmental organisation doing social welfare work in China. He subsequently became the managing director of E-deo Asia, a business consultancy firm.Benjamin Pwee, e-deo.asia. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
After spending more than 20 years in assisting many ethnic people and communities in the social and welfare work in South Australia, Giang left paid work in late 2008 to pursue a new path in Metaphysics and Complementary and Alternative Medicine with all its various holistic therapies.
Marc Marie de Rotz Marc Marie de Rotz(26 March 1840 - 7 November 1914) was a French missionary belonging to the Paris Foreign Missions Society. Upon arriving in Japan in June 1868, de Rotz engaged in missionary and social welfare work in the Sotome region of Nagasaki.
Carius became the head of the German Red Cross (DRK) in Thuringia, leading 8,700 volunteers who are involved in water and mountain rescue as well as other social welfare work. He also joined the Mubea group of companies, serving as the head of corporate development and governmental affairs in 2018.
Spies, Bombs and the Path of Bliss, pp. 288–89 By 1992 he was doing welfare work at a church in Sydney. In late 1992, he fled to Queensland after an attempt was made on his life. In 2012 he published a book, Smoke'n'Mirrors: How the Australian People Were Screwed.
She also engaged in political women's and youth work. She was employed between 1915 and 1921 in welfare work for the municipality. At some point during 1921 she married her late husband's brother or cousin (sources differ). It was also in 1921 that she moved with her children to Hamburg.
Wesley Mission operates out of over 200 centres and employs over 2000 staff with a budget of $160 million. Methodists began doing welfare work in Sydney in 1812. This work became Sydney's Central Methodist Mission in 1884. In 1946 it opened a psychiatric care facility, now known as Wesley Hospital Ashfield.
Mary was a member of the Twentieth Century Club, Daughters of the American Revolution, Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Women's Missionary Society, Interdenominational Society, and was active in the community welfare work of Calvary M. E. Church. Robert and Mary frequently entertained guests and hosted large gatherings at their home in Southeast Washington, D.C.
The Law Society of South Australia called Tenison Woods an "authoritative and widely published voice" on child welfare and an advocate for the advancement of women. She was awarded an OBE in 1950 and a CBE in 1958 for her child welfare work. There is a Mary Kitson Street in Watson, ACT named after her.
She was an examiner in English for the intermediate board of education. She married the solicitor and journalist Maurice Joseph Cosgrave in July 1901. Cosgrave developed an interest in maternity and child welfare work, becoming a prominent member of the Women's National Health Association from its inception. She succeeded Lady Aberdeen as president in 1939.
There he was honored for his contribution in social welfare work. In a meeting arranged in Calcutta by Surendranath Banerjee to support Gandhi's anti racism movement in South Africa Abdul Jabbar was the president. Indian National Congress and All India Muslim League was founded during his lifetime but he never showed interest in politics.
In this capacity, she was the leading voice for the County in Annapolis on key policy issues. In addition to these roles, Griffith also served on the Child Welfare Work Group, the Maryland State Arts Council, the Maryland Film Industry Coalition, the Joint Committee on Children Youth and Families, and the House Judiciary Committee.
Mary Teresa Enright (22 July 1880 - 21 January 1966) was a New Zealand teacher, journalist and community worker. She was born in Charleston, West Coast, New Zealand, on 22 July 1880. In the 1948 King's Birthday Honours, Enright was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire for social welfare work among women and children.
He had married Annie Sheffield. He and his wife refused to use rickshaws because they thought it was degrading for the men. Instead, they walked and had shelters built for the rickshaw men so that they had a place to sleep and to get out of the rain. Annie was appointed a CBE in 1948 for welfare work.
Lord began her career with family welfare work in Minneapolis from 1927–1929. Lord was a member of Junior League of Minneapolis in Minneapolis. Lord became a volunteer case work for the Charity Organization Society in New York City. Lord became the president of the Junior League of the City of New York from 1936 to 1938.
During the same year, she founded the "São Francisco's Worker's Union", the first Christian worker's movement in Bahia. A year later, she started welfare work in the poor communities of Alagados and Itapagipe. It was then that they started calling her the "Angel of Alagados". In 1937, she transformed the Worker's Union into the Worker's Center of Bahia.
She introduced courses in domestic science and music. She also wanted girls to have an ethic of community service and the schools she ran were involved with welfare work in hospitals and Christian organisations. Jobson was appointed a Member of the British Empire in 1955, for services to education in Australia. She died on 22 June 1964.
He also was manager and owner of amateur and professional baseball teams. Active in young men's welfare work. Dixon was elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fifth Congress (January 3, 1937 – January 3, 1939). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1938 to the Seventy-sixth Congress and for election in 1940 to the Seventy-seventh Congress.
However, this assumption was swiftly dismissed by Stead some years later, declaring that, "The idea of Darkest England ... was the General's own. My part, of which I had no wish to speak ... was strictly subordinate throughout."Quoted in Robert Sandall, The History of the Salvation Army, vol. 3, 1883–1953, Social Reform and Welfare Work (1955), Appendix B, pp.
Dedicated to St. John the Baptist, its name preserves the memory of a local priory dissolved by King Henry VIII.www.british- history.ac.uk In Victorian London the parish's work was recognised by social campaigners, such as the philanthropist Charles Booth, for its welfare work in a deteriorating inner-city environment.www.booth.lse.ac.uk To give opportunities to the "local poor",www.lse.ac.
Vijay Kumar Chopra (born 31 January 1932, Lahore) is the chief executive officer and editor in chief of the Punjab Kesari print news organisation. He is involved in social welfare work and has received a Padma Shri award (Literature & Education : 1990). In August 2009, he was elected by the Chairman of the Press Trust of India.
Mary Elizabeth Richmond (30 August 1853 - 3 July 1949) was a New Zealand community leader, teacher and writer. She was born in New Plymouth, New Zealand in 1853. Her parents were William Richmond and Emily Elizabeth Atkinson. She was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1949 New Year Honours for services in education and welfare work.
During the DDR-regime, the socialist government only allowed for the training of church employees. Besides the training of ministers, the seminary offered one-year social welfare work training programs. The nature and quality of such training resulted in another name change, "Theological Seminary Friedensau". Two years later, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists accredited the Seminary as a senior college.
Sanjay Purohit is an Indian Brahmin from the Rajpurohit subgroup. He is involved in welfare work with Sankara Nethralaya and World Vision International. In a Hindustan Times interview, Purohit said Steve Jobs inspires him because of Jobs' "ability to use technology to change lives for the better. " His favorite books are The Bhagavad Gita, The Innovator's Dilemma and Future Shock.
In the off-season from wrestling, he was a truck-driver in Wellington and participated in Māori Church Welfare work. 1 July 1967 over 450 guests attended his wedding to Tangiwai Tihema at the Gospel Hall, Levin. Tihema is the granddaughter of David Raunini Tatana, M.B.E. of Levin, a descendant of Te Rauparaha. After the wedding, the couple chose to live in Wellington.
In 1907, he had a gas chamber built at his home in Highgate, allowing stray cats and dogs to be euthanised humanely.HISTORY OF THE RSPCA IN WESTERN AUSTRALIA, RSPCA Western Australia. Retrieved 5 January 2016. Outside of his animal welfare work, Lander also sat the Sanitary Institute exams, allowing him to work as a food inspector for the Perth board of health.
Jessie Alexander (2 June 1876 - 27 March 1962) was a New Zealand Presbyterian deaconess and missionary. She was born in Brantford, Ontario, Canada, on 2 June 1876. In the 1947 New Year Honours, Alexander was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for social welfare work with Māori children. Alexander died in Auckland on 27 March 1962, and she was buried at Purewa Cemetery.
In 1878, Herbert Vaughan, then Bishop of Salford, suggested that Ingham's group take on domestic duties at St Joseph's Foreign Missionary College, in Mill Hill, London. Although some of the women preferred to continue with their local welfare work, the shops were sold and the group moved to London. The move would eventually provide the opportunity for the sisters themselves to become missionaries.Clark, Emily.
For most of World War II, Ellis was absent from the theatre, performing welfare work in hospitals, and from time to time giving concerts to entertain members of the armed forces. Returning to the stage after the war, Ellis was successful in the 1944 and 1947 British productions of Noël Coward's melodrama Point Valaine, playing a hotel keeper in a sordid, clandestine relationship with her head waiter.
The following year she tried to return to Stanford, but the University wouldn't rehire her. Instead, Roberts became a research assistant at the Carnegie Institution in Washington D.C. until 1907. Starting in 1905, she was a worker for the San Francisco Settlement Association's South Park Settlement – a center of social welfare work for the city. However, this building was destroyed by the San Francisco Earthquake in 1906.
While in Paris, Thomas Alexander had a fall, which developed hip disease. A wealthy widow with an independent income, she used it to benefit local charities and welfare work. Her mission in life was determined soon afterward, when in Chicago, in 1874, Thomas Alexander, who had almost recovered his health, was run over by a wagon driven by a drunken German drayman and instantly killed.
Zafar ul Islam Khan Ex. Chairman of Delhi Minority Commission , author and journalist based in New Delhi. He is currently editor and publisher of The Milli Gazette fortnightly focusing on issues concerning the Muslim community, which is a second largest majority in India. He is also the founder and chairman of Charity Alliance,Charity Alliance an organisation involved in relief and welfare work in India.
During these years he also created numerous woodcut images and illustrations. In 1924 he undertook a trip to Paris and turned away from Expressionism, to the point of personally destroying more than sixty of the paintings he had produced between 1920 and 1924. In 1934 Orlowski's first solo exhibition was presented at the . During the Second World War he involved himself in welfare work in the Berlin National Gallery.
The Singapore SPCA relies primarily on donations from the public to fund its operations. In its website, it states that "over $2,000,000 annually is required to carry out the animal welfare work." In 2010, they received over S$2.2 million from various avenues such as cash donations, membership fees, fund-raising events and sales of souvenirs and pet supplies. In that same year, their total expenditure was over S$2.1 million.
He was captured and imprisoned by the Japanese in 1943. After the war, he did welfare work, establishing an orphanage for war orphans, and teaching music in Tongyeong and Busan. After the armistice ceasing hostilities in the Korean War in 1953, he began teaching at the Seoul National University. He received the Seoul City Culture Award in 1955, and traveled to Europe the following year to finish his musical studies.
He admitted that: > paternalism has no place in industry. Welfare work that consists in prying > into employees' private concerns is out of date. Men need counsel and men > need help, often special help; and all this ought to be rendered for > decency's sake. But the broad workable plan of investment and participation > will do more to solidify industry and strengthen organization than will any > social work on the outside.
Trépanier later announced the expansion of a program that encouraged social assistance recipients to accept temporary jobs for non-profit organizations.Elizabeth Thompson, "Quebec expands welfare-work program," Montreal Gazette, 27 May 1994, A5. Trépanier also announced in March 1994 that Quebec would increase its monthly breastfeeding subsidy from $15 to $37.50, while simultaneously reducing funds for milk formula, in an effort to encourage more low-income women to nurse their infants.
Noble practiced medicine in Colorado after completing her medical degree. She taught and practiced at the Woman's Medical College in Ludhiana as a Presbyterian medical missionary from 1906 to 1909. She served women who would not, for religious reasons, be seen by male doctors. She published pamphlets based on this work, The Mission Station as a Social Settlement, Hospital Work in India, and Baby And Mother Welfare Work In India.
The Public Welfare Section prepared a list of projects as a guide for its own activities. This list was superseded almost immediately by a new list of projects received from higher authority. The projects listed were charts of the Japanese Welfare Ministry, objectives and policies of Military Government public welfare work (also to be put into chart form), directives and proclamations, and a series of forms and records.
Zedner, Lucia. The criminological foundations of penal policy, p. 248, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003; Her mother died when she was 20, and she spent the next fourteen years looking after her father who was in poor health. When her father died in 1895 she went to Minnesota to perform welfare work amongst Cornish mineworkers living there, the trip having been organised by the wife of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Later the Department of Corrective Services revoked her pass, making her prisoner support work near impossible. Smith's welfare work, however, was not confined only to prisons and the legal system. She also spent considerable time and money finding homes for children whose parents could not look after them and helping displaced children to find their own parents again. The children with nowhere to go often ended up living with her.
She also worked in London, where 'khaki fever' was perceived as a problem. Child welfare work led the WPS to set up a benevolent department and a home for mothers and babies. Allen was awarded the OBE for services during the War. Allen and Margaret Damer Dawson cropped their hair and assumed a severe military appearance, and Allen wore her police uniform in public for the rest of her life.
She also joined the local branch of the book workers' trades union ("Buchbinderverband"). In 1913 she attended a training at the Trades Union Academy in Berlin, in order to develop her political and organisational skills,Christl Wickert: Unsere Erwählten, 1986, S. 42. and participated in various regional assemblies and congresses and national party conferences. Between 1914 and 1918, during the First World War, Eichler undertook war welfare work.
Her extensive work providing support for prisoners earned her the name "MumShirl". She was appointed as a Member of the Order of the British Empire and Member of the Order of Australia for her welfare work. She raised 60 foster children over her lifetime and was involved in the establishment of the Redfern Aboriginal Children's Services. Isabel Coe was also a Wiradjuri woman who was from the Erambie Mission.
Malak teli is a Muslim community currently residing in great numbers in the region of northwest India - Haryana, Delhi, Western Uttar Pradesh, Northern Rajasthan, Sindh and Punjab. Their profession has been oil pressing and ginning which, most of the community members, are still practising. The Malik community welfare organisation was formed in Delhi before 1947 for the welfare work of the community. Malak teli people usually marry within their community.
In his later career as an industrial consultant and following the invention of the Gantt chart, he designed the 'task and bonus' system of wage payment and additional measurement methods worker efficiency and productivity. In 1908-09 he undertook projects at Joseph Bancroft & Sons CompanyNelson, Daniel, and Stuart Campbell. "Taylorism versus welfare work in American industry: HL Gantt and the Bancrofts." Business History Review 46.1 (1972): 1-16.
While Labour Manager at Rowntree's, in 1931 Northcott reframed the Institute of Industrial Welfare Workers into the Institute of Labour Management.M. M. Niven, Personnel Management 1913-63 (London, 1967)Alistair Evans, 'Labour Management vs. Welfare Work' (Thames Valley University PhD thesis, 2003) online here He was also President (1941-3) and Director (1949–50) of its successor, the Institute of Personnel Management, now the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development.
Aerial view of Linnanmäki in 2008 Linnanmäki (, colloquially Lintsi, ) is an amusement park in Helsinki, Finland. It was opened on 27 May 1950 and is owned by non-profit Lasten Päivän Säätiö (Children's Day Foundation), which operates the park in order to raise funds to Finnish child welfare work. In 2019, the foundation donated a total of 4.5 million euros. Linnanmäki is the most popular amusement park in Finland.
On April 10, 1951, Bram was elected on the second ballot, as the Suffragan Bishop of South Florida, during a diocesan convention held in Daytona Beach, Florida. He was consecrated on September 21, 1951, by Henry I. Louttit Sr. of South Florida. He was also active in civil and welfare work. Bram died of a heart attack while attending a retreat at the Good Shepherd Monastery in Orange City, Florida, on February 9, 1956.
From 1915 to 1918, Godart served as the Undersecretary of State for War in charge of the armed forces medical service. When Édouard Herriot became Prime Minister of France in 1924, Godart was appointed as the Minister for Labour, Hygiene, Welfare Work, and Social Security Provisions. Godart's time in this position came to an end with Herriot's ouster the next year. In 1926, Godart became a Senator, representing the department of Rhone.
In 1922, when women were first eligible to stand for the Tasmanian House of Assembly, she was a political candidate in Denison, again as an independent. As vice- president of the Women's Health Association, Petersen was instigator of both child welfare work and bush nursing in Tasmania. She was on the executive of the National Council of Women and the Tasmanian council of the Workers' Educational Association until her death. Petersen was twice married.
The Divinity School has close ties with the church’s social and welfare work and with its missionary work. Furthermore, there are good contacts with the nearby Theological Faculty of the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, the MF Norwegian School of Theology in Oslo (Norway) and the Wartburg Theological Seminary, Dubuque, Iowa. The school also maintains connections with the Evangelical Lutheran Churches of Papua New Guinea, Brazil, Tanzania and Zaire through a scholarship program.
During Florence's sanitarium lobbying, she became acquainted with numerous citizens of McLean County. In 1924, four years after the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment, a few friends suggested she run for the Illinois Senate because she was well known in the community and was the most qualified woman to run. Her candidacy was announced on January 25, 1924. Her platform included progressive welfare work, balancing power between Chicago and downstate, and lessening taxation.
In January 1944 the Polish staff in all East African camps had been reduced. In an official letter from the British Authorities it was said. "It has been agreed that the welfare work in the Polish settlements must continue and the minimum staff stays to ensure this must be retained." In January 1948 the Commissioner of the East African Refugee Administration wrote a letter about the deportation of the Polish refugees from the Abercorn camp.
Oliver Carl Fredrik Rosengren, (born 4 June 1992 in Växjö) is a Swedish politician for the Moderate Party. He had been a councilor in Växjö municipality since January 2017. He has been the chairman of the municipality work and welfare work since January 2015. Previously he was the district president of the Moderate Party youth group in Kronoberg, and a member of the national board of the Youth group between 2014 and 2016.
Lighthouse centers assisted blind people in education, vocational training, job placement, and recreation. She opened similar centers in many other cities in the United States, and then in other countries, including Italy, Japan, China, and Brazil. She attended international conferences on blindness in Edinburgh in 1908 and in London in 1914. In 1914 she was awarded a gold medal by the National Institute of Social Sciences, for her contributions to social welfare work.
The National Federation of Gold Coast Women (NFGCW), later renamed the Ghana Federation of Women, was a women's organization in the Gold Coast, one of the country's first women's organizations. Established by Evelyn Amarteifio in 1953, it was dissolved in 1960 as Kwame Nkrumah pursued government control of women's organizations in Ghana.Rose Miyatsu, Tracking the history of women's welfare work in Ghana, The Ampersand, Washington University in St Louis, 11 January 2020. Accessed 18 April 2020.
In February 2013, for the first time, he was invited to perform the song "Give Me Your Love" with Yoga at the CCTV Spring Festival Gala. In June, he went to Berklee College of Music for further studies. In September, he was invited to the China Tennis Open with famous tennis players Li Na and Novak Djokovic to promote public welfare work. In November, Zhang released his 10th album, Just Love, and held his 10th concert in Guangzhou.
The next step in child welfare work is investigating and intervening. The current foster care system in the U.S. operates on worker mobility, human contact and the frequent movement of children. However, with that movement grinding to a halt after the lockdown, caseworkers are limited in their ability to monitor and investigate potential cases of abuse. The U.S. Children's Bureau evaluated alternatives to caseworker inspections, while many state and local governments began limiting or canceling abuse allegation investigations.
He decided to become a social worker and joined Jeans School, now Kenya Institute of Administration, Kabete, where he trained for social welfare work. He was appointed Welfare Officer in Kericho in 1950. In 1953 he worked briefly as a broadcaster with Voice of Kenya (VOK), African Service, Kisumu. He was awarded scholarship by the Kipsigis County Council in 1955 to the South Devon Technical College, Torquay, to study for a diploma in public and social administration.
After leaving the Alliance, Moskowitz (then Israel) wrote for the United Hebrew Charities and Charities, a social work journal, for which she later became an editorial assistant. She also joined the New York section of the Council of Jewish Women, yet another organization that helped Jewish immigrants. With her role as chair of the philanthropy committee, her focus was welfare work. She oversaw sick and poor children at a hospital on Randall's Island and visited troubled girls in reformatories.
The Susy Utzinger Animal Welfare Foundation Academy offers courses on the handling and care of animals and on the management of animal shelters and animal welfare projects. The seminars and lectures target veterinarians, animal keepers, dog trainers, volunteers and animal friends. A trainee programme prepares young Swiss veterinarians for animal welfare missions and neutering campaigns. By co- founding the „Swiss Association for Animal Welfare Work“ (Verband Arbeitswelt Tierschutz Schweiz), the organisation promotes a new profession "Animal Welfare Expert".
This was due to, in part, the welfare work such as furniture 'up- cycling' with residents and Shabby2Chic CIC. In March 2011, the firm established the first fully dedicated Flat Panel Display (FPD) recycling centre in England, costing £250,000. This is despite concerns from industry body WRAP about the dangers of mercury in such facilities. It also launched its eBay shop, enabling the company to sell working parts from dismantled FPD units as it prioritises reuse over recycling.
However, the welfare work of the Brotherhood continued and expanded under Father Tucker's leadership. He believed that the role of the organisation was to provide a ‘fence at the top of the cliff rather than ambulances at the bottom,’ and he deployed a range of clever tactics to achieve social change including producing films, public campaigns, letters to newspapers and other advocacy. The Brotherhood’s tradition of exploring new ways to address disadvantage through innovation, research, partnerships and advocacy continues to this day.
NFA’s Dogs In Distress campaign aims to give as many dogs as possible a life free of pain and suffering. This is achieved by assisting several dog shelters with funds, food, and veterinary care. The campaign is active in Croatia, Jordan, Montenegro, Philippines, Serbia, South Africa, Thailand, and Turkey. It is particularly active in South Africa financing two leading Cape Town shelters – The Emma Animal Rescue Society (TEARS) and Fallen Angels and taking part in regular animal welfare work in township areas.
Her sister, Lydia Rous, who had been working for John Bright came to the USA for a second time in 1866. She met Elizxabeth and assisting in hospitals that were treating the wounded from the American Civil War. After the war, Comstock continued to advocated for prison reform, temperance, peace, women's rights, home-mission welfare work and how to adapt to urbanization. In 1879, Comstock toured the country raising funds, for the "Exodusters," the numerous black emigrants from the South to Kansas.
Nawab Waqar ul Mulk (seated, first from left) with other leaders of the Aligarh movement. Mushtaq Hussain Kamboh's social welfare work in Moradabad, India's famine-affected areas was noticed by the renowned Muslim leader Sir Syed Ahmad Khan in 1861. In 1866, at age 25, Mushtaq Hussain Kamboh started his political career as a worker of the Aligarh Movement and, in this connection, became a member of its wing- Scientific Society. Later for the Scientific Society, he translated a book, 'French Revolution and Napoleon'.
Imran Khan Foundation is another welfare work, which aims to assist needy people all over Pakistan. It has provided help to flood victims in Pakistan. Buksh Foundation has partnered with the Imran Khan Foundation to light up villages in Dera Ghazi Khan, Mianwali and Dera Ismail Khan under the project 'Lighting a Million Lives'. The campaign will establish several Solar Charging Stations in the selected off-grid villages and will provide villagers with solar lanterns, which can be regularly charged at the solar-charging stations.
After postgraduate training and work experience overseas, she eventually registered as a medical practitioner and set up a private practice in Dunedin. She was appointed Medical Superintendent at St. Helens Hospital, Dunedin, and served from 1905–1938. Dr. Siedeberg was active in community and welfare work. A founding member of the Dunedin branch of the New Zealand Society for the Protection of Women and Children in 1899, she was president of the Dunedin branch from 1933 to 1948 and became honorary life president in 1949.
Caseseday's second large welfare work was to establish from her bedside an Order of King's Daughters in Louisville. It was a new conception of service at that time— new even in New York where it originated, and wholly unknown in Kentucky or the South. Casseday's sister told her the story of how the Order began, and how its basic motive was TO BE rather than TO DO, the Doing to spring spontaneously out of the Being. Casseday at once had a desire to help this movement.
In the United Kingdom, factory inspectors were appointed for the first time in 1893. In 1896 to look after its women and child workers Rowntree's appointed their first inspector - a Mrs E M Wood. Edward Cadbury of Cadbury Brothers in 1909 called together employers to discuss industrial welfare work and as a result 25 employers formed an association with Mrs Wood of Rowntree's as Secretary. The work of 'welfare workers' came to public attention during a trade show in 1912 at Olympia in London.
After paying off the debts of the congregation, these groups turned to social and welfare work. Isaac Nelson Ross, later the 41st bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal, served as pastor of Allen Temple for 5 years between 1900 and 1907. In 1975, the Broadway church building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, qualifying as significant statewide because of its well-preserved historic architecture and because of its place in Ohio's history. Since that time, the building has been destroyed,, Ohio Historical Society, 2007.
Today Gangaramaya serves not only as a place of Buddhist worship; it is also a centre of learning. The temple is involved in Buddhist welfare work including old peoples' homes, a vocational school and an orphanage. The temple is uniquely attractive and tolerant to congregation members of many different religions. It has also been instrumental in establishing the Buddhist temple on Staten Island (US) the Buddhist Center in New York and the Buddhist Centre in Tanzania, thereby helping to propagate the Dhamma in other countries.
In March 1910, two students prepared for the Preliminary Cambridge Local Examination, under the guidance of Sister St Egbert. In 1915, the school entered a candidate for the Junior Cambridge Examination and two for the Senior Cambridge Examination. In the 1920s, conversational and written English, arithmetic, singing, writing, drawing, dictation, geography, drills and physical exercise were taught in the school. Emphasis was given to the development of talents and social skills like playing the piano, being involved in welfare work and excelling in handicraft and needlework.
Emeka has two grandchildren, born to Adiba and her husband; Irenne Ighodaro and Osita Ighodaro."Eye Of Fire" Spectrum Books, Ibadan, 2000, p.252, In 1990, the heads of all the 19 communities of the Idemili Clan in his home State of Anambra accorded Anyaoku a unique honour by investing him with the title of Ugwumba Idemili. His wife, Bunmi, is also a chieftain – Ugoma Obosi and Idemili – in her own right, with a long involvement in welfare work in Nigeria and in the Commonwealth.
This same year, the house also helped launch the local branch of the Industrial Christian Fellowship. The house secured the services of Eleanor Kelly in 1929, who was a founding member of the Association of Welfare Workers. She said of her work, "All firms who had been doing welfare work before the outbreak of war were asked to take relays of people (mostly women) to train."Woollacott, Angela "Maternalism, professionalism and industrial welfare supervisors in World War I Britain" , Women's History Review, 3:1, 29-56.
Jungwirth is known for his animal welfare work and specifically his efforts aiding the rescue of dogs from Spanish kill shelters. He has also stated that he would never play in China, because of his opposition to the annual Yulin Dog Meat Festival and general treatment of dogs in the country. He married his wife Kathleen officially on 23 Dec 2015, and on 4 June 2016 they married in the church. As of 27 February 2018, Jungwirth holds a U.S. green card, qualifying him as a domestic player for MLS roster purposes.
Jewish children leave Prague for Britain. Winton appears towards the end of the video, wearing glasses. Shortly before Christmas 1938, Winton was planning to travel to Switzerland for a skiing holiday. Following a call for help from Marie Schmolka and Doreen Warriner, he decided instead to visit Prague and help Martin Blake, who was in Prague as an associate of the British Committee for Refugees from Czechoslovakia, then in the process of being occupied by Germany, and had called Winton to ask him to assist in Jewish welfare work.
The BCN members visited the homes of the poor in their assigned areas and provided proper parenting training, instruction on sanitation, midwifery services, and general welfare work. In 1928, Seay and four other BCN members completed their formal midwife training at the Belize Hospital. Seay led the BCN to assist victims of the 1931 Belize hurricane and organized a program to provide meals for school children. In 1933, she campaigned for a male candidate, who was running for the Belize Town Board and was rewarded with her own appointment as its first female member.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Dyer worked with a group of fellow Aboriginal women to establish and deliver services to the Aboriginal community despite a lack of funding. In 1966, Dyer accepted a full-time position with the Aborigines Advancement League, continuing and formalising her welfare work. When the Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service was established in 1973, Dyer moved to a position there. In 1976, Dyer delivered a speech at a national adoption conference and this instigated discussion of an Aboriginal- run agency to support Aboriginal children and families.
1911 was also the year that Eva put herself in the shoes of the working women when she worked for a short time as a pit-brow lass to sample the working conditions for herself. However, as war broke out, Eva and Esther took up welfare work among German women and children in England. In December 1913, Eva signed the "Open Christmas Letter" to women of Germany and Austria. 1915 then saw Eva Gore-Booth become a member of the Women's Peace Crusade and in 1916 the No-Conscription Fellowship.
Peepal Farm was started in December 2014 by Robin Singh and Joellen Anderson, who were then joined by the third co-founder Shivani Bhalla later on. Immediately before the trio had been running a sterilization program for stray dogs in New Delhi. The idea stemmed from the limitations of animal welfare work, and they decided to do it in a way that involves and inspires others. In the year 2015 once the primary construction was complete, farm was open to people to volunteer and work in exchange of lodging and vegan meals.
Services Guide to Cairo Book pub: The Co-ordinating Council for Welfare Work in Egypt The Club in Cairo provided a much-appreciated centre for those on leave. Comfortable lounges where one could relax and drink tea in comparative coolness, or eat ice-cream and fruit salad, provided a welcome haven from the desert environs. The club was particularly appreciated by the nurses; the club was open to all nursing sisters of the Allied forces and was much used by sisters from other countries. Many interesting people were met and lasting friendships made there.
A charter member and elder of Westmoreland United Church, he was for over 20 years superintendent of the Sunday school. It was believed he was one of the first members of the church. "The church," he often said, "never fails in the matter of relief for needy citizens and there is no better place where young people can fit themselves for future citizenship than in promoting its welfare work." One thing his closest friends never quite understood was how Conboy could find time for such a variety of activities.
This same group held fund-raisers in the hall during the war years with the first of these being advertised as "Petticoat Lane" in 1941. The library was still in use during the early war years when the Welfare Work Circle made use of its room. Local people indicate the importance of this hall in the social life of the area. The local community members speak fondly, the older ones alerently, on the broad range of activities held in the hall, which became very much a part of their lives.
On her return to Vienna she did not immediately return to her studies, but took several weeks out to volunteer for social and welfare work. It was at this time that she became familiar with living conditions in the city's working class quarters, such as Favoriten, Ottakring and Floridsdorf. She moved on to the University of Vienna, studying historiography (geschichtswissenschaft), English studies (Anglistik) and philosophy. Her student studies were influenced, in particular, by two of her tutors, the theoretical Marxist philosopher Max Adler and the philosopher Heinrich Gomperz.
MDRC helped pioneer the use of random assignment to test social programs. Its evaluations of welfare work programs influenced the welfare reform of the 1990s. In the 1990s and 2000s, MDRC’s evaluation of the Career Academies high school reform model, which showed impacts on participants’ earnings eight years after graduation, influenced the expansion of the model around the nation. MDRC was the intermediary for the first social impact bond demonstration in the United States, a project to reduce recidivism among 16- to 18-year-olds incarcerated at Rikers Island.
On September 7, 1917, the New York State Senate rejected his nomination as Chairman of the recently-established New York State Food Control Commission.REJECTS PERKINS FOR FOOD BOARD in NYT on September 8, 1917 On October 2, the State Senate rejected again his nomination and instead confirmed the appointment of John Mitchell, Jacob Gould Schurman and Charles A. Wieting to the Food Control Commission.PERKINS REJECTED; MITCHELL CHOSEN in NYT on October 3, 1917 As chairman of a finance committee of YMCA, he raised $200,000,000 for welfare work among American soldiers abroad.
She was also active in child welfare work helped pass some of the first child labor laws in New York state. She was on the board of trustees of the Shelter for Unprotected Girls and worked with the YWCA and the Girl's Patriotic League, in World War I. Huntington started the Visiting Nurses Association and was a founder of Syracuse Memorial Hospital. Huntington was a public speaker on many topics and gave lectures such as "The Social Value of Educations in our Public Schools" as well as the promotion of women's suffrage.
One of the largest of the SCAP programs was Public Health and Welfare, headed by US Army Colonel Crawford F. Sams. Working with the SCAP staff of 150, Sams directed the welfare work of the American doctors, and organized entirely new Japanese medical welfare systems along American lines. The Japanese population was in a poor state: most people badly worn down, doctors and medicines were very scarce, and sanitary systems had been bombed out in larger cities. His earliest priorities were in distributing food supplies from the United States.
In 1903 began his long and fruitful career associated with Drake University, the first sixteen years of which he was professor of economics, political science and sociology, and of the latter two branches until his death. Professor Herriott was active in welfare work, being on the board of the Associated Charities of Des Moines for thirteen years, and associated with the Iowa Children's Home Society. He was likewise engrossed in city and state government, their politics and their problems, both as a student and as a worker. Combined with his training in the historical field.
On her return to England she trained as a doctor at the London School of Medicine for Women, qualifying as MBBS from the University of Durham in 1906. In 1907 she obtained a Diploma in Public Health from the University of Cambridge.Biography, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. With a private income, Lambert devoted much time to voluntary child welfare work, becoming honorary director of the Central Council for Infant and Child Welfare, honorary secretary of the Central Council for the Care of Cripples, and a member of council of the Invalid Children's Aid Society.
In the summer of 1918, Major and Superintendent Raymond W. Pulliam established the Women's Bureau, originally directed by Marion O. Spingarn. The Women's Bureau was created to deal with issues involving juveniles, specifically girls, such as delinquency, investigating casework on juveniles, preventive welfare work to curb criminality in juveniles, and the supervision of movie theatres, dance halls, and similar places. Most of the officers in the Bureau in 1920 were trained as school teachers, nurses, or social workers, and included one lawyer. On October 7, 1918, Mina Van Winkle was appointed a police officer in the Women's Bureau.
Her main focus as First Lady was to advance gender equality. She was instrumental in the passage of the 1990 Act for Promoting the Social Equality of Women, which bettered conditions for women in areas such as property rights, employment, and domestic violence law. She also participated in social welfare work, the preservation of national traditions, environmental causes, the establishment of parks in rural communities, anti- drug work, and the prevention of violence against children. She took part in her husband's efforts to promote peace in Central America and accompanied him on many of his official trips abroad.
Hansen's most well-known works were The Atlantic Migration, 1607–1860: A History of the Continuing Settlement of the United States (posthumous, 1940) and The Immigrant in American History (posthumous, 1940). The former was a study of the factors that encouraged emigration among Europeans in the period before the Civil War, and was based on three years of research in European archives. Although he specialized in American immigration history, he wrote on other subjects, including Old Fort Snelling, 1819–1858 (1918), Welfare Campaigns in Iowa (1920), Welfare Work in Iowa (1921), and The Mingling of the Canadian and American Peoples (posthumous, 1940).
Detail of the front door The church was founded in 1647, thanks to a donation of about 6000 ducats to the Pious Workers by a nobleman of the time, as a reward for their welfare work. The building of the church, designed by Onofrio Antonio Gisolfi, was interrupted by the plague that struck the city in 1656, and was completed in 1682 by Cosimo Fanzago, who worked under the patronage of Cardinal Diego Innico Caracciolo di Martina. The church underwent various reconstructions. In eighteenth century the facade was rebuilt by Salvatore Gandolfo, following designs of Francesco Solimena.
All Dutch nationals, all EU nationals, as well as non-EU nationals who have lived in the Netherlands for at least three consecutive years, are eligible to vote for the district committee of the Amsterdam borough in which they live according to the city's civil register. Each district committee elects three of its members to form an executive committee (dagelijks bestuur). The district committees' jurisdiction is determined by the central municipal council. Responsibilities delegated to the 2018-2022 district committees include parks and recreation, streets and squares, refuse collection, permits and events, preparation of zoning plans, passports and drivers licenses, and welfare work.
During the war, the Club conducted Farewell Evenings for locals leaving to join the Forces and as time went by Welcome Home celebrations for returning servicemen. Service personnel based close by and those recuperating on the peninsula often attended the weekly dance in the hall. This Club continued to conduct dances until the 1950s. During WWII, the monthly meeting of the Welfare Work Circle of the Women's National Emergency League (WNEL) was held in the library room in the Memorial Hall, where they made camouflage netting and woollen gloves, socks and balaclavas for British bomb victims during their working meetings.
Following in his father's footsteps, Woodsworth was ordained as a Methodist minister in 1896 and spent two years as a circuit preacher in Manitoba before going to study at Victoria College in the University of Toronto and at Oxford University in England. While studying at Oxford University in 1899, he became interested in social welfare work. During his stay, the Second Boer War broke out, and Woodsworth was immersed in discussions about the moral values of imperialism. In 1902, following his return to Canada, he took a position as minister at Grace Church in Winnipeg, and in 1903, married Lucy Staples.
Ayub Ali Master (; died 1980), was an early British Bangladeshi social reformer, politician and entrepreneur. He is notable for pioneering social welfare work for many early British Asians. He established a boardinghouse known as "Number 13" in his home which provided many facilities for British Asians. He is one of the earliest of Sylhetis to arrive in the United Kingdom, now hosting one of the largest Bangladeshi diaspora communities outside of Bangladesh and due to this, he was amongst the famous household names in the Sylhet region during his time referred to as the brave jahazis (sailors).
Many of the bills she introduced related to Galax and Carroll County; she also was patron of an unsuccessful bill which would have provided $100,000 to create pensions for mothers. Caldwell did not run again in 1929, and returned to her hometown, where she devoted herself to welfare work, serving for more than twenty years as a volunteer social worker. She maintained interest in current events in her post-legislative career, and was active in numerous clubs and organizations, including the Virginia Federation of Music Clubs, the Federation Women's and Professional Club and the Democrat Club. She was a Methodist.
A place where you might expect to hear children sing rather than casuals beg. The Sydney Mail report indicated that by 1882 very little of the actual welfare work of the Refuge was carried on in Harper's cottage. ...the bulk of the front building being occupied by the boardroom and the apartments of the managerial staff, [while] the recipients of charity are accommodated in various outbuildings at the rear. The reading room was described as "one of the most cheerful" of these apartments, but far less pleasant was the smokehouse, or disinfecting chamber at the rear.
The period of the second world war saw the CA campaigning to preserve Irish neutrality and in defence of Irish workers in Britain. The 1945 general election gave the organisation hope that the new Labour government would carry out its long held policy of Irish self-determination. However, by 1949 the Attlee government had passed the Ireland Act, which preserved the unionist position in Northern Ireland. During this period the CA puts its main efforts into welfare work among the Irish in Britain, coming under fierce attack from, among others, the Catholic Church, which accused the organisation of being a ‘communist front’.
She is commemorated at the Carers Association (now Carers NSW) by the Clare Stevenson Memorial Lectures. In 1981, to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of the formation of women's services in World War II, Stevenson was asked to lead the female contingent in the Anzac Day parade in Sydney. She published The WAAAF Book, a collection of reminiscences by former members of the service, with Honor Darling in 1984. Stevenson was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the 1988 Australia Day Honours for her services to the community and her welfare work with veterans.
In addition to working with the management committees of the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne and Melbourne University, Stevenson was also heavily involved in the Victoria Lawn Tennis Association and Alexandra and Peninsula Golf Clubs. On 31 December 1960, she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, recognizing her social welfare work and Philanthropy. She was further made Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1963 and a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1968. The University of Melbourne awarded Hilda with an honorary doctorate of laws in 1973.
Waterworth attended advocacy events like the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in Washington, DC in 1924 and the International Alliance of Women for Suffrage and Equal Citizenship in Berlin in 1929. In 1935, Waterworth embarked on a fundraising tour throughout Tasmania for the King George V and Queen Mary maternal and infant welfare appeal. Her motto for this was 'Make Motherhood Worthwild' Waterworth advocated that the betterment of women in their homes would improve the falling birthrates. Waterworth helped create and chair the Tasmanian Council for Mother and Child through her bridging the welfare work for women.
Karlin, who never married, lived in South London. A self- proclaimed atheist, she was a lifelong campaigner for Jewish and left-wing political causes, as well as an anti-fascist activist. A member of the Anti- Nazi League, she was prominent in protests against Holocaust denier David Irving, and campaigned to expose what she claimed were the Nazi sympathies of the Austrian politician Jörg Haider. She was an active member of the actors' union, Equity, and was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1975 for her union and welfare work.
During this time a new approach to youth welfare work was developed in Prenzlauer Berg, in response to the intensifying impoverishment and surging unemployment that took hold in Germany as the great depression spread across from the west. Between 1927 and 1933 Ella Kay worked in Prenzlauer Berg as head of the department responsible for youth day-care centres in the district. In December 1927 she enrolled at the Socio-political seminar of the German Politics Academy ("Deutsche Hochschule für Politik"). Classes took place in the evenings, which made it possible for her to combine her studies with her paid day job.
Born in Liverpool, Wardle served in the British Army from 1942–1947. He emigrated to South Africa to take up welfare work in 1948 and came to a full conversion to pacifism while working with Manilal Gandhi at the Phoenix settlement. Wardle returned to London in late 1952 working as a journalist on Peace News, a newspaper for the grassroots peace and justice movement. Active alongside Peace News editor Hugh Brock and fellow peace campaigner Michael Randle in Operation Gandhi, Wardle took part in the early anti-nuclear marches to Porton Down and the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Hartwell.
After concluding her education, Rose held a variety of jobs that included sales, mail-order, and promotional work, often coupled with secretarial duties. From 1923 to 1929 she worked as a secretary and sales correspondent for the Larabee Flour Mills Corporation. In 1929, after she "spent one hot New York summer filing papers and then spent the next hot summer taking them all out," Rose determined that she "had to find something purposeful" and decided to move into public welfare work. As a first step in that direction she worked as the Administrative Assistant for the New York Citizens Street Traffic Committee during 1929 and 1930.
He was born Edmund John Chisholm Gray on 2 April 1870 in Dublin, Ireland, the son of Edmund Dwyer Gray, an MP in the British House of Commons and Caroline Agnes Gray. He was the maternal grandson of Caroline Chisholm, the English humanitarian renowned for her social welfare work with female immigrants to Australia. His paternal grandfather was Sir John Gray, the Irish Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City in the House of Commons, and an associate of the Irish nationalist Daniel O'Connell. He was educated at the Benedictine monastery at Fort Augustus, Scotland, and at Clongowes Wood College, a Jesuit school in County Kildare.
We of the Never Never sold more than 300,000 copies over thirty years, was translated into German in the 1920s In an 1931 poll by The Herald (Melbourne) its author was voted the third most popular Australian novelist after Marcus Clarke and Rolf Boldrewood. By 1990, over a million copies of the book had been sold. During the First World War, Gunn became active in welfare work for Australian servicemen overseas. At the end of the conflict she began campaigning for the welfare of returned servicemen, liaising with government departments and becoming a patron of the Monbulk RSL, attending every event they organised over two decades.
Bhethai Amatayakul (, , 10 February 1916 – 25 October 1991) was a Thai educator who was influential in the country's Scouting movement and social welfare work. He founded the Santirat Commercial College (now the Santirat Institute of Business Administration) and the Bangkok Boy Scout Club, served as President of the National Council on Social Welfare of Thailand, and was a member of the Asia-Pacific Scout Committee, representing the National Scout Organization of Thailand. In 1984, Bhethai was awarded the 173rd Bronze Wolf, the only distinction of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, awarded by the World Scout Committee for exceptional services to world Scouting.
She also visited the White House. Kennedy's parents told Woman's Day that she was "studying to be a kindergarten teacher," and Parents was told that while she had "an interest in social welfare work, she is said to harbor a secret longing to go on the stage." When The Boston Globe requested an interview with Rosemary, her father's assistant prepared a response which Rosemary copied out laboriously: > I have always had serious tastes and understand life is not given us just > for enjoyment. For some time past, I have been studying the well known > psychological method of Dr. Maria Montessori and I got my degree in teaching > last year.
For a time the JFB was the largest charitable Jewish organization with over 50,000 members. In 1917 Bertha Pappenheim called for "an end to the splintering of Jewish welfare work," which helped lead to the founding of the Zentralwohlfahrtsstelle der Juden in Deutschland (Central Welfare Agency of German Jewry), which continues to exist today. Her work on its board was supported by Sidonie Werner. After the Nazis assumed power in 1933 Pappenheim again took over the presidency of the JFB, but resigned in 1934 because she could not abandon her negative attitude to Zionism, despite the existential threat for Jews in Germany, while in the JFP, as among German Jews in general, Zionism was increasingly endorsed after 1933.
Benoit Aubin, "Quebec introduces sweeping reform of welfare program", The Globe and Mail, 11 December 1987, A13; Lise Bissonnette, "Paradis is determined to make welfare work", The Globe and Mail, 19 December 1987, D2. ;Construction sector Paradis introduced legislation in 1986 to create the Commission de la construction du Québec (CCQ) to oversee Quebec's construction sector. The commission was overseen by representatives from labour, management, and the government and was mandated to issue certificates based on competency. Access to the construction trade had previously been determined by work experience, and Paradis said the new system would provide opportunities for younger workers.Robert McKenzie, "Quebec plans to overhaul construction industry", Toronto Star, 13 November 1986, A3.
Around the turn of the 20th century, women organized in the entire country, and formed various women's organizations, for, as well as against, women's suffrage. The two most important were the Confederation of Swiss Women's Associations (Bund Schweizerischer Frauenvereine (BSF), since 1999 known as alliance F), under the leadership of Helene von Mülinen, and the Swiss Alliance for Women's Suffrage (Schweizerischer Verband für Frauenstimmrecht (SVF)), which was founded in 1909. During the First World War, the movement came to a halt, as more critical problems came to the forefront. Among others, the women's alliances carried out the collective welfare work during the war, since Switzerland at this time still had no social insurance.
Anitta Müller-Cohen Anitta Müller-Cohen born Rosenzweig (1890–1962) was an Austrian-born Jewish woman who emigrated to Tel Aviv, Palestine, in 1935. In Austria, she was a prominent social worker, politician and writer who became increasingly interested in Zionism. One of the leading members of Vienna's Jewish National Party, she organized and actively contributed to the First World Congress of Jewish Women which was held in Vienna in May 1923. At the American Jewish Congress in Chicago in 1925, she addressed the opening session. After emigrating to Palestine in 1935, she became a member of the Mizrahi Women’s Organization, founded the Women's Social Service, and continued her welfare work which was mainly concerned with children and immigrants.
During World War I, Fisher undertook welfare work among women munitions workers in Sheffield. It was the wartime scale of illegitimacy and its resulting hardships that led her, in 1918, to found the National Council for the Unmarried Mother and her Child, in order to challenge the stigma associated with single parent families, and to provide them with the support they needed. The Council aimed to reform the Bastardy Acts and Affiliation Orders Acts, which discriminated against illegitimate children, and also to address the higher death rates of children born outside marriage, by providing accommodation for single mothers and their babies. They also provided practical advice and assistance to single parents, and helped with their inquiries.
During the interwar years, Wood Street Mission held a range of social activities in addition to provision of welfare. For example, Wood Street held cinema shows and sewing classes during the 1930s. While the Second World War disrupted some of the mission's activities (the holiday home requisitioned by the Government and rooms in the Manchester building were used as an air raid shelter), Wood Street was able to run a centre for evacuated children. After the Second World War, the mission continued its welfare work in Manchester and Salford. Even after the establishment of the post-war welfare state, Wood Street annually distributed over 1,000 articles of clothing and around 4,000 toys in the late-1940s and 1950s.
Stevenson obtained a Bachelor of Education degree from the University of Melbourne in 1948. A founding patron of the Council of Ex-Servicewomen's Associations, she was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1960 Queen's Birthday Honours for her welfare work on behalf of female veterans. She helped set up the Scholarship Trust Fund for Civilian Widows' Children in 1963, and was a research officer with the New South Wales Council on the Ageing (COTA) from 1969 to 1978. In 1975, Stevenson was involved in establishing the Kings Cross Community Aid and Information Service, serving for a time as President and as a member of the Management Committee until 1987.
Between 1914 and 1916 she was the president of the New Mexico Federation of Women's Clubs. A leader in the suffrage movement in New Mexico, she wrote in an editorial for "The Outlook" in 1927, "...we have found the suffrage of great assistance to women in speeding up the program of welfare work which was started by their organizations more than ten years ago...we knew exactly what we wanted and we got it. More than that, we are using it and we expect to go on using it..." Asplund was the first librarian for the University of New Mexico and the first woman regent of the University of New Mexico, serving from 1921 to 1923.
A view of one of the Sethi Mohallah's courtyards The Sethis were traders who had businesses in China, India, Afghanistan, Iran and Central Asia, with trade centres at Mazar Sharif, Tashkent, Bukhara, Samarqand and other cities in the Asian region. The Sethi family was involved in considerable welfare work in Peshawar and had contributed to the construction of wells for the poor, along with the Lady Reading Hospital and the Islamia College Mosque.Cultural evening at historical Sethi House today Saturday, May 10, 2008 The downfall of the Sethis began during the Russian Revolution in 1917, when their businesses experienced setbacks from which they never recovered, forcing them to leave Central Asia and return to Peshawar.
In November 1962 Brown was lucky in the ballot for Private Members' Bills and introduced the Nursing Homes Bill which allowed the government to register and regulate private nursing homes. This Bill was ultimately successful. In December 1962, Brown was rescued from a caravan in which he was sleeping near Parliament in which an oil heater had begun to leak and nearly caught fire; he explained that he used the caravan for child welfare work and occasionally slept there after late sittings. Despite having been adopted as Conservative candidate for Tottenham, Brown was upset by the Douglas-Home government's abolition of resale price maintenance which he knew that many pharmaceutical chemists relied on to set prices.
Elephants doing maths, trained lions and dancing monkeys made the audience laugh and wonder. The Russian Imperial family as well as Grand Dukes were frequent visitors to the shows. Stage of Theater Orpheum DarmstadtSeating and tables at Orpheum Darmstadt During World War I And in times of high unemployment in the late 30s the leadership of Orpheum donated significant amounts to welfare work and offered free seats to the injured, invalids and unemployed. The financial situation in the following years was rather tight. On October 1, 1940 the NS organization “Kraft durch Freude” KdF (Strength through Joy) took over management of the theater and remodeled the building to turn it into a KdF location as known in other places.
Sarkar's keen interests in academia saw him being closely associated with the University of Calcutta. He was elected Fellow in 1893 and was responsible for the expansion of post graduate science teaching facilities and research in medical education as well as the introduction of students' health examination and welfare work. He served as the President of the University of Calcutta's Council for Post Graduate Teaching Arts from 1924 to 1929, the President of the Post Graduate teaching in Science from 1924 to 1942 and the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta from 1919 to 1921.Official Website of University of CalcuttaVice Chancellors of University of Calcutta In 1920 he travelled to England to represent the University of Calcutta at the Empire Universities Conference in London.
The latter resulted in colliery workers' houses springing up on the main Durham road. Slightly before that, in the 1860s, a rather advanced area of working-class housing had been erected at Tudhoe Grange – built by Marmaduke Salvin to house local workers. These houses were, unusually, semi-detached and arranged in a chequerboard layout, very much in contrast to the dreary terraces that were then the standard. Although these days of rapid industrialisation and rapid growth of population were days of ignorance and squalor, they also saw the 19th century drive for education and religion. A National School was built and opened in 1841; St.Paul's Church was built at Spennymoor in 1858 and all through these formative years the Non- conformist churches combined welfare work with prayer.
Rahmani teaching music, song, meditation, English to underprivileged children in Delhi, IndiaRahmani's naturally inclined animal welfare work began early in her childhood in Kuwait. As an adult, since the early 90s, she was involved in animal welfare in India, specifically with relevance to street animals' birth control, rescue, treatment, rehabilitation, and adoption in various pockets of Mumbai, Pune, Delhi, and Rajasthan. She spearheaded critical and sensitive rescue and animal birth control operations, including restructuring inhumane practices into humane operations both in Mumbai and in Panchgini. In 2014, Seema adopted an underprivileged residential "jugghi" in South Delhi with the intention of replacing the negativity, hostility, and violent behaviors she witnessed with a peaceful, positive, and productive attitude towards life and each other.
In 1819/1820 Mariquita married Jean-Baptiste Washington de Mendeville, a French aristocrat and part of the French consul in Buenos Aires. Their marriage has been described as an unhappy one. Sánchez began to be in favor of divorce beginning in the 1830s. However, Sánchez and Mendeville’s union proceeded until Mendeville was sent back to France in 1835. After marrying Mendeville, she continued to host tertulias in her house, continuing her home’s status as a center for “music, plastic arts, and welfare work as well as politics.” In 1823, she worked with President Rivadavia and founded the “Sociedad de Beneficencia” the first philanthropic institution run by Buenos Aires women to protect and educate women, which allowed them to participate in public life.
His large collection of historical documents about the city was given to the library by his great grandson and his paintings went to the Norwich Castle Museum In 1856 he married Caroline Cozens-Hardy, the eldest daughter of William Hardy and Sarah Cozens of Letheringsett Hall, who changed their surnames by royal licence in 1842 to Cozens-Hardy. They had six children and after her elder son Russell James Colman recovered from a serious childhood illness in 1863, Caroline became closely associated with the work of the Jenny Lind Hospital for children. She gave her husband much support in his civic and parliamentary duties. She was the central figure behind all the welfare work for the employees of the company.
These saints have not only governed this Ashram belonging to the Mannaathi sect or panth but at points in time, have governed all Ashrams even outside of the Mannaathi sect or panth through which constant social welfare work has been done. According to the scriptures and mythology, Lord Shiva had manifested as Guru Gorakhnath to make Yoga popular. And by becoming a teacher of yoga and through his knowledge of nutrition and diet, Guru Gorakhnath worked for the welfare of humanity and it is believed that the founder of this ashram Sri AmritNathji Maharaj is one of the form Guru Gorakhnath of by the people, this is what his devotees and followers believe. Sri Amrit Nathji Maharaj lived in the forest for 24 years as he developed the science of yoga and naturopathy by experimenting on his own body.
He is author of reports like — In Pursuit of Industrial Harmony: An Employer's Perspective by Naval H. Tata (1976), A Policy for Harmonious Industrial Relations (1980), On Wage Problem and Industrial Unrest by Naval H. Tata, C. V. Pavaskar, B. N. Srikrishna (1982) In 1966, he had been appointed a member of the Labour Panel of the Planning Commission set up by the Union Government. He contributed to sports, was associated with a host of other activities, and held senior offices in social, educational and welfare work. He was President of Indian Hockey Federation for fifteen years and was at helm when Indian hockey team won Olympic Gold in 1948, 1952 and 1956. He served many other institutes like the Indian Institute of Science, the Bombay State Social Welfare Council, Swadeshi League, and the National Safety Council.
After graduating from St John's University in 1936, he did welfare work by day, while writing for the theatre by night. Among Essex's first jobs were stints on the New York City newspapers New York Daily Mirror and the Brooklyn Eagle, short stories for Collier's and The Saturday Evening Post as well as work in a Broadway play titled Something for Nothing (which Essex later called "a resounding failure"). Writing for the movies was uppermost in Essex's mind throughout the period (and he did co-write the original story for Universal's Man Made Monster (1941)), but "the big break" never came, and World War II intervened as he was called into the draft, serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps. Five or six days after Essex's discharge in 1947, he ran into an old acquaintance whose new job was finding playwrights to turn into screenwriters for Columbia Pictures.
The committee that recommended closure gave finances as the primary reason, estimating $250,000 per year was required to operate the school, with no funding prospects, as the Tufts operating deficit in 1967 was more than $500,000. However, the trustees' June 1967 recommendation for closure cited that the school had not "maintained its place of considerable distinction in theological education." Tufts President Hallowell was given authority by a Massachusetts state court to dispose of school funds, and he created the Crane Program fund amounting to $213,000 in 1972 to support Tufts's religion department and chaplaincy, as well as scholarships for students pursuing liberal ministry and social welfare work. The Crane Library Collection was always a part of the Tufts University Library and was now retained by the university library; the Universalist Historical Society Library which had been housed at Tufts was transferred to Harvard Divinity School in 1975.
For example, S. R. Nathan persuaded the Government to reappoint Council of Presidential Advisers members for shorter terms.. Nathan has also commented favourably on his relationship with the Government, saying that he queried decisions and that senior members of the Government "showed deference" to him.. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has mentioned that he and Nathan had frequent meetings in which the President would comment on matters and he would consider his views.. The President also exercises soft power by championing good causes.. Examples include the creation of the President's Star Charity by Ong Teng Cheong, and the launch of the President's Challenge by S. R. Nathan. Nathan also acted as patron of and supported various charity organizations by attending fund-raising and volunteer appreciation events.. This may be seen as a convention allowing the President to engage in charitable or community welfare work without government objection..
The organisation is considered to have an influence "out of proportion to its numbers" because of "disciplined organisation, welfare work, its reputation for honesty and street power".Jamaat-i-Islami of India, Pg 156 – The Oxford dictionary of Islam By John L. Esposito, Oxford University Press US, 2004 Jamaat is a player in national level bodies for the Muslim community in India like the All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, All India Muslim Personal Law Board, and All India Babri Masjid Movement Coordination Committee. It has also involved itself in inter-faith forums like Movement for Peace and Justice (MPJ), and Forum for Democracy and Communal Amity (FDCA). MPJ and FDCA have played an active role in bringing peace to many violence-hit areas across the country["Kannur erupts again – BJP men, Marxist killed"] The Indian Express Thursday, 2 December 1999 and in protecting civil rights.
In her 1921 paper, "The Trend of Child Welfare Work", published in the North American Review, Bary wrote, "The greatest enemy of childhood has been the fatalistic complacency with which every phase of child life has been regarded". Bary worked for the federal Social Security Board (SSB) since its inception in 1935 during the Great Depression. She worked there until 1948, representing the SSB in western states, helping them to develop social welfare reform plans in order to receive federal money. Shortly before her death in 1973, Bary was one of twelve women interviewed by Jacqueline Parker for her work on the Suffragist Oral History Project for the UC Berkeley Oral History Center, "in order to document their activities in behalf of passage of the Nineteenth Amendment and their continuing careers as leaders of movements for welfare and labor reform, world peace, and the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment".
Smith, Peretz and Smith, Social Enquiry, Social Reform and Social Action: One Hundred Years of Barnett House, p. 43. Government came to look on the NCSS as an important partner in welfare work: in 1932, at the request of the Ministry of Labour, the National Council assumed responsibility for some 1,500 occupational clubs for the unemployed, and as the Second World War approached it agreed to create and resource a national network of Citizens’ Advice Bureaux.National Council of Social Service, Unemployment and Community Service, 1936; Adderley, "Bureaucratic Conceptions of Citizenship in the Voluntary Sector (1919-1939): The Case of the National Council of Social Service", p. 199. 200 Bureaux were set up in September 1939; 900 existed by the end of 1940: J. Davis Smith, 100 Years of NCVO and Voluntary Action, p. 80. In 1940 Adams was appointed to the Government’s Advisory Committee on maximising voluntary co-operation in tackling social problems arising from the war.
" Edwin Schallert of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "All in all, I would put this picture well up among Paramount's Crosby features as an effort to accomplish something different ... It is a pleasantly fabulous excursion in the dream classification, and the cutback to the medieval past is effectively enough introduced in this adaptation of the Mark Twain story." Variety was not quite so enthusiastic: "Picture wears the easy casualness that's a Crosby trademark, goes about its entertaining at a leisurely pace, and generally comes off satisfactorily. It's not high comedy and there’s little swashbuckling." Richard L. Coe of The Washington Post wrote that the idea was "so promising that it's a shame the picture collapses," explaining, "The early half of the picture accepts Bing's particular brand of easy charm ... But social welfare work among the downtrodden peasantry (there's even a scene that reminds you of 'Monsieur Vincent') hardly fits into my idea of cheerful musical comedy.
In 1984, he visited the Soviet Union to study the blind welfare work there and, on his return, started a Talking Book Library at PBMA in 1986. In 1999, after presenting a paper at a conference in New Delhi conducted by the All India Confederation of Opththalmologists, Pandya visited the US a second time to attend the Vision 99 conference in New York, on the sidelines of which he raised funds for an eye hospital. The project, conceptualized by Pandya and costed approximately US$2 million, was completed the next year when H. V. Desai Eye Hospital was opened to public in January 2000. The hospital is known to provide free of cost surgeries to poor people, constituting 60 percent of the total surgeries performed there. Since inception, the hospital is reported to have performed 367,000 surgeries and attended to 2.293 million out-patients and is known to be the largest eye hospital in Western India.
For many years, since his student times, he carried on welfare work, mainly in the circles of literature and art, as a protector of nature, and to commemorate the Katyń Crime. Duda's creation was a subject of four Master's and three Licentiate theses (in Częstochowa and in Słupsk) and his poetical-biblical works became the main subject of a habilitation thesis in 2015 (Małorzata Nowak: “Versified Bible Today”, published by: KUL, Lublin 2015). He was awarded: Knight Cross of the Order on Poland's Revival (I2002); Medal of the Commission of National Education (1999); Golden Medal of the Protector of the National Memory's Places (2011); Golden Medal “For the Merits of in Protection of the Environment and Natural Resources (1990); Award of Honour “Meritorious for Polish Culture” (2006); Golden Award of Honour “Meritorious for Nature Protection” – given by the League for the Preservation of Nature (1990); Commemorative “Cross of the Protection of the South-Easterly Borderland” (2010); Combatant Commemorative Cross “Victors 1945” (2010); Medal “Pro Memoriam” (2011); Award of Honour “Meritorious for Opole Voivodeship” (2010); award “meritorious for the Regional Activity”. In 2010, he received the “Karol Miarka Award”, a prestigious award in Opole Silesia and in Upper Silesia.
Its treatment of employees brought praise from outside the Copper Country.William Ferris Higbie, “The brighter side of industrial relations,” Social Service Review, April 1916, p.11. A writer for Harper’s Magazine visited a number of iron and copper mines of upper Michigan in 1882, but singled out Calumet & Hecla’s labor policies for particular praise. He wrote: “But the Calumet Company have no reason to fear strikes among any portion of their force.” In 1898, the Michigan Commissioner of Mineral Statistics enthused: “No mining company in the world treats its employees better than Calumet & Hecla.”George A. Newett, Michigan Commissioner of Mineral Statistics, 1898, Mines and Mineral Statistics, p.181. In 1916 the Arizona Bureau of Mines wrote of Calumet & Hecla, which had no operations in Arizona: “Probably no mining company in the country has paid more attention to welfare work than has the Calumet & Hecla Mining Company, and its subsidiaries, in the upper Michigan peninsula.” The Arizona Bureau of Mines followed with more than a page detailing the employee benefits at C&H; in Michigan.University of Arizona, Bureau of Mines, State Safety News, Bulletin 38, 31 Oct. 1916, p9-11. But Calumet & Hecla, like the other mining companies in the Copper Country, was accused of paternalism.

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