"When Movements Matter" accounts for the origins of Social
Security as we know it. The book tells the overlooked story of the
Townsend Plan--a political organization that sought to alleviate
poverty and end the Great Depression through a government-provided
retirement stipend of $200 a month for every American over the age
of sixty.
Both the Townsend Plan, which organized two million older
Americans into Townsend clubs, and the wider pension movement
failed to win the generous and universal senior citizens' pensions
their advocates demanded. But the movement provided the political
impetus behind old-age policy in its formative years and pushed
America down the track of creating an old-age welfare state.
Drawing on a wealth of primary evidence, historical detail, and
arresting images, Edwin Amenta traces the ups and downs of the
Townsend Plan and its elderly leader Dr. Francis E. Townsend in the
struggle to remake old age. In the process, Amenta advances a new
theory of when social movements are influential.
The book challenges the conventional wisdom that U.S. old-age
policy was a result mainly of the Depression or farsighted
bureaucrats. It also debunks the current view that America
immediately embraced Social Security when it was adopted in 1935.
And it sheds new light on how social movements that fail to achieve
their primary goals can still influence social policy and the way
people relate to politics.
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