The poor law of lunacy : the administration of pauper lunatics in mid-nineteenth-century England
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The poor law of lunacy : the administration of pauper lunatics in mid-nineteenth-century England
Leicester University Press, 1999
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Note
Bibliography: p. 283-305
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Examines the legal and administrative regime of the 19th-century asylum, and argues that it is to be thought of as an aspect of English poor law, in which the medical superintendent of the asylum has little power. The text also examines the place of the county asylum movement in the poor law debates of the mid-19th century. Using the Leicestershire asylum as a case study, the author looks at the role of the poor law officers in the admission processes of the asylum, and relations between poor law staff, asylum staff and the poor law and lunacy central inspectorates.
Table of Contents
- Socio-legal history and asylums
- Poor Law and Asylum Law as a single strand
- the legislation of pauper lunacy
- the pragmatics of co-existence - local officials and pauper lunacy
- local administration - the creation of coherence among misfits
- the Lunacy Commission and the soft-centre of reform
- conclusion - asylums, poor law and modernity. Appendices: quantitative indicators
- Leicestershire statistics
- dietaries, Leicester Asylum and Leicester Workhouse
- forms of admission documents and case books.
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