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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page research paper that discusses the development of the Canadian welfare state between 1935 and 1970. While Canada’s program for universal health care, which is known as Medicare, is the principal focus of scholarship on the Canadian welfare state, this system has a broader scope that extends beyond health care, as it also addresses the needs of children, aboriginal peoples, and educational issues. Examination of literature on various aspects of the development of the Canadian welfare state between the years of 1935-1970 suggests that the processes involved in bringing benefits to the populace also entailed factors by which the government endeavored to initiate forms of social control. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khcan35.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
(Twohig, 2007, p. 5). But while Canadas program for universal health care, which is known as Medicare, is the principal focus of scholarship on the Canadian welfare state, this system
has a broader scope that extends beyond health care, as it also addresses the needs of children, aboriginal peoples, and educational issues. Examination of literature on various aspects of the
development of the Canadian welfare state between the years of 1935-1970 suggests that the processes involved in bringing benefits to the populace also entailed factors by which the government endeavored
to initiate forms of social control. Scholars have pointed out that the Canadian peoples fondness for the Medicare program is based on the way in which this program is
imagined, which, in general, refers to a "brief but very important golden age of Canadian Medicare," which began in the "early 1950s" and extended to the "early 1970s" (Twohig, 2007,
p. 5). In 1947, Tommy Douglas, as the leader of the Saskatchewan government, introduced the first hospital insurance program in Canada (A brief history, 2007). Throughout the 40s and 50s,
Canada moved toward instituting universal health coverage, but this movement was resisted by the Canadian Medical Association and Saskatchewan physicians went on strike when that provinces government passed the first
public health care program in 1962 (A brief history, 2007). Subsequently, a Royal Commission recommended a "universal and comprehensive national health insurance program" and in 1966, the federal government created
a national Medicare program with Ottawa providing 50 percent of the funding for the provinces. Tillotson (1997) states that these developments had a significant effect of class relations within Canada
(Tillotson, 1997). Working class received a level of security that was unprecedented in Canadian history, even if these provisions were, in many ways, still inadequate (Tillotson, 1997). However, this security
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