The New Jersey Income-maintenance Experiment

The New Jersey Income-maintenance Experiment
Author: David Kershaw
Publisher:
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1976
Genre: Income maintenance programs
ISBN: 9780124050013

USA. Monograph describing the successful Experiment carried out in new Jersey to alleviate the poverty of low income groups through negative income tax - examines essential operating elements (selection of sample families, data collecting, administrative aspects of transfer payments), analyses certain research and technical issues, and reviews some complex administrative problems, etc. References and statistical tables.

Social Administration: Managing finances, personnel, and information in human services

Social Administration: Managing finances, personnel, and information in human services
Author: Simon Slavin
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 432
Release: 1985
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780866563451

Featuring pragmatic guidelines for all administrators and practitioners in the social services, this book presents both theory and case materials to give the student of social administration a textured understanding of the social agency and its dilemmas and walks the student through the very practical daily problems and challenges. Published in two parts: Volume 1: An Introduction to Human Services Management Volume 2: Managing Finances, Personnel, and Information in Human Services

Social Experiments

Social Experiments
Author: Larry L. Orr
Publisher: SAGE
Total Pages: 284
Release: 1999
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9780761912958

Intended to provide a basic understanding not only of how to design and implement social experiments, but also of how to interpret their results once they are completed, author Larry L. Orr's Social Experiments is written in a friendly, how-to manner. Through the use of illustrative examples, how-to exhibits and cases, and boldface key words, Orr provides readers with a grounding in the experimental method, including the rational and ethical issues of random assignment; designs that best address alternative policy questions; maximizing the precision of the estimates; implementing the experiment in the field; data collection; estimating and interpreting program impacts, costs, and benefits; dealing with potential biases; and the use and misuse of experimental results in the policy process. This book will be useful not only to those who plan to conduct experiments, but also to the much larger group who will, at one time or another, want to understand the results of experimental evaluations.