Honouring the Contract
By (Author) John E Martin
Te Herenga Waka University Press
Victoria University Press
17th September 2010
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Australasian and Pacific history
361.650993
Paperback
296
Providing a vital background to some of the pressing issues in contemporary New Zealand politics, this novel perspective on the distinctive foundations of the countrys welfare state raises issues concerning modern-day concepts of citizenship as this welfare state comes under challenge. Government policy has been linked to this evolving social contract between wage earners and the state; With the contracts genesis in the migration of wage earners from Britain in the 1840s, New Zealand became an experimental laboratory, first promoting settlement of the land, then safeguarding the economic position of the male breadwinner, andwith the emergence of the welfare state in the early 20th centuryprotecting the standard of living of families. As it explains the social policies and how they changed over time, this book reveals how honoring this contract was the driving force behind its evolution.
John E. Martin is the parliamentary historian in the Parliamentary Service and the author of The House: New Zealands House of Representatives, 18542004 and Parliaments Library.