- Harry Cassidy
Harry Cassidy (1900 - 1951) was a Canadian academic, social reformer, civil servant and, briefly, a politician.
Cassidy was a pioneer in the field of social work. He was the founding dean of the School of Social Welfare at University of California, Berkeley in the early 1940s before resigning to work for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. He subsequently became dean of the School of Social Work at the
University of Toronto .In the 1930s he was involved with the
League for Social Reconstruction and was a founding member of theCo-operative Commonwealth Federation , however, in 1950 he ran for the leadership of theOntario Liberal Party coming in second in the party leadership convention.Cassidy conducted studies of welfare services beginning in the 1930s and 1940s and influenced the creation of a Canadian
welfare state and improved social services as a means of improving society and alleviating poverty. During theGreat Depression he argued that the government ofR.B. Bennett should create a broad system of social services such as Unemployment Insurance as a shock absorber against poverty. His research influenced Bennett's decision to try to emulateFranklin Delano Roosevelt 'sNew Deal and some of his ideas were ultimately taken up by the Liberal government ofWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King in the 1940s, particularly after Cassidy published his 1943 study "Social Security and Reconstruction in Canada". He continued to criticize Canada's social security system as inadequate, writing in 1947 that ""The provisions for general assistance are limited, restrictive, mean, and antiquated ... . [T] hey are literally disgraceful and unworthy of a nation of Canada's status".He also worked for a period in the civil service as deputy minister of welfare in
British Columbia .References
*Irving, John Allan: "A Canadian Fabian: the life and work of Harry Cassidy." University of Toronto: PhD thesis, 1983.
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