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CHARITY ORGANIZATION SOCIETY

The 'Charity Organization Societies' also called the 'Associated Charities' was a private charity that existed in the late 1800's and early 1900's as a clearinghouse for information on the poor.[1] The society was mainly concerned with distinction between the deserving poor and undeserving poor.[2] The society believed that giving out charity without investigating the problems behind poverty created a class of citizens that would always be dependent on alms giving.[3] The society originated in Elberfeld Germany and spread to Buffalo, New York around 1877.[4] The conviction that relief promoted dependency were the basis for forming the Societies. Instead of offering direct relief, the societies addressed the cycle of poverty. Neighborhood charity visitors taught the values of hard work and thrift to individuals and families. The COS set up centralized records and administrative services and emphasized objective investigations and professional training. There was a strong scientific emphasis as the charity visitors organized their activities and learned principles of practice and techniques of intervention from one another. The result led to the origin of social casework. Gradually, over the ensuing years, volunteer visitors began to be supplanted by paid staff.
Charity Organization Societies were made up of charitable groups that used scientific philanthropy to help poor, distressed or deviant persons. The Societies considered themselves more than just alms giving. Their ultimate goal was to restore as much self-sufficiency and responsibility as an individual could manage. Through their activities, the Societies tended to be aware of the range of social services available in their communities. They thus became the primary source of information and referral for all services. Through these referrals, a Society often became the central agency in the social services of its community.
The Charity Organization Society movement can be compared to the settlement house movement which emphasized social reform rather than personal problems as the proper focus of charity.

Contents
Britain's Charity Organisation Society
References

Britain's Charity Organisation Society


In Britain the Charity Organisation Society was led by Helen Bosanquet supported the concept of self help and limited government intervention to deal with the effects of poverty. The organisation claimed to use "scientific priciples to root out scroungers and target relief where it was most needed".[5]

References


1. (1895). "Charity's Clearing House." ''The Washington Post''. December 15.
2. (1900) "Commissioners of the District of Columbia." Washington Government Printing Office.
3. (1887). "Lots of Chronic Paupers." ''The Washington Post''. October 21.
4. (1880). "National Conference on Social Welfare." 1880.
5. Rees, Rosemary (2001). ''Poverty and Public Health 1815-1949''. London: Heinemann.


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