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T. H. Marshall

Thomas Humphrey Marshall (19 December 1893 – 29 November 1981) was an English sociologist who is best known for his essay "Citizenship and Social Class," a key work on citizenship that introduced the idea that full citizenship includes civil, political, and social citizenship.[7]

T. H. Marshall
Marshall c. 1950
Born
Thomas Humphrey Marshall

(1893-12-19)19 December 1893
London, England
Died29 November 1981(1981-11-29) (aged 87)
Cambridge, England
Political partyLabour
Academic background
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Influences
Academic work
DisciplineSociology
Sub-discipline
School or tradition
Institutions
Notable works"Citizenship and Social Class" (1950)
Notable ideasSocial citizenship
InfluencedDavid Lockwood[6]
Signature

Biography edit

T.H. Marshall was born in London on 19 December 1893 to a wealthy, artistically cultured family (a Bloomsbury family).[8] He was the fourth of six children.[8] His great-grandfather acquired an industrial fortune and his father was a successful architect, leaving Marshall with a privileged upbringing and inheritance.[9] Because of his wealthy background, he obtained a formal education at Rugby School, a private boarding school. [8] He continued his schooling at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied history.[5]

Marshall was a civilian prisoner in Germany during the First World War.[10] He then went on to pursue a fellowship program at Trinity College in October 1919, where he entered into academia as a professional historian.[10] This was interrupted when he became the Labour candidate in Farnham[11] in the 1922 election.[5] Despite being unsuccessful in this political campaign, Marshall found his endeavors beneficial because they brought him into close contact with working-class people and exposed him to the injustices and prejudices within the British class system.[10] In "A British Sociological Career," he recounts that he "knew nothing of working-class life" growing up, therefore marking this experience as a transformative awakening to what would guide his work.[12]

Marshall later became a tutor in social work at the London School of Economics in 1925.[13][14] He was promoted to reader and went on to become the head of the Social Science Department at LSE from 1944 to 1949 and Martin White Professorship of Sociology from 1954 to 1956.[13][14]

Marshall worked for UNESCO as the head of the Social Science Department from 1956 to 1960,[15] possibly contributing to the United Nations International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which was drafted in 1954, but not ratified until 1966.

He was the fourth president of the International Sociological Association (1959–1962).[16]

Marshall died on 29 November 1981 in Cambridge.

Academic research edit

Citizenship and Social Class edit

T.H. Marshall wrote a seminal essay on citizenship– which became his most famous work– titled "Citizenship and Social Class." This was published in 1950 and was based on a lecture given the previous year. British citizenship was originally bestowed upon those of a higher status group with their own civil, political, and social privileges. Yet Marshall argued that, with the expansion of capitalism, a "new kind of citizenship slowly pulled apart the package of privileges hitherto enjoyed exclusively by the well-born."[10] He analysed the development of citizenship as a development of civil, then political, then social rights.

Marshall defined the three aspects of citizenship as follows:

  • Civil rights are "the rights necessary for individual freedom-liberty of the person, freedom of speech, thought and faith, the right to own property and to conclude valid contracts, and the right to justice."[17]
    • This concept of individual civil rights "also undid statutes and customs that constricted the 'right to work.'" Working people could now legally pursue employment, which corresponds with the need of capitalism for labor markets.[17]
    • Marshall also argued that "the principle of civil citizenship contains within itself...a 'drive' toward further equality - political equality."[17]
  • Political rights refer to "the right to participate in the exercise of political power."[18]
    • Universal Suffrage [17]
    • Electing representatives to Parliament [10]
  • Social rights include as "the right to a modicum of economic welfare and security to the right to share to the fuIl in the social heritage and to live the life of a civilised being."[18] Social rights are usually understood as benefits associated with the modern welfare state and positive freedoms such as welfare rights.[19]

Marshall also argued that these three aspects of citizenship developed in England in a certain order. Civil rights are broadly assigned with the eighteenth century, political to the nineteenth, and social to the twentieth century.[20] There is a complex interplay between these conceptions of citizenship. According to Marshall, "once citizens are recognized as full members of society, they also receive undeniable social rights, such as protection against poverty."[21]

This expansion of social rights "replaced earlier ideas of providing material assistance only as a matter of charity or, as under earlier social welfare legislation, of making state assistance conditional on recipients forfeiting their civil or political rights."[10]

Social rights are awarded not on the basis of class or need, but rather on the status of citizenship. Marshall claimed that the extension of social rights does not entail the destruction of social classes and inequality. T.H. Marshall was a close friend and admirer of Leonard Hobhouse, and his conception of citizenship emerged from a series of lectures given by Hobhouse at the LSE. Hobhouse is more philosophical, whereas Marshall is under the influence of measures taken by Lord Beveridge after the Second World War.[22] All of these people were involved in a turn in liberal thought that was called "new liberalism," a liberalism with a social conscience. T.H. Marshall also talks about industrial citizenship and its relationship with citizenship. He said that social rights are a precursor for political and civil rights.

Among the lasting influences of "Citizenship and Social Class" is its commentary on capitalism in relation to emerging social rights. Marshall noted the "contradiction between social rights and the requirements of a market economy within the dynamic context of welfare-capitalism...where citizenship functioned to contain these conflicts between social classes."[23] Class inequality within capitalist societies created tension with Marshall's emerging ideas of citizenship. He argues that the creation of social rights are necessary in reducing this tension between civil, political, economic inequality. Marshall saw this process as a struggle unfolding over many centuries and looked to the future in hopes of a more egalitarian society.[10]

Influence edit

Marshall's work on citizenship influenced other scholars. Reinhard Bendix's Nation Building and Citizenship (1964) is said to owe "much to Marshall and much of it reads like a commentary on Marshall's own treatment of that theme."[14]

Talcott Parsons's "Full Citizenship for the Negro American?" (1965) [24] is held to draw "enormously from Marshall."[14]

Stein Rokkan met Marshall at the London School of Economics and Rokkan's work on citizenship was influenced by Marshall's ideas.[25]

Anthony Giddens's discussion of citizenship in The Nation-State and Violence (1985) builds on Marshall's distinctions and analysis.[26]

Marshall, along with Stein Rokkan, is credited with the establishment of "what has become the standard narrative of the evolution of modern democratic citizenship."[27]

Marshall's emphasis on social rights influenced both theoretical literature and policies pursued in the twentieth century.[28]

Criticisms edit

Marshall's analysis of citizenship has been criticised on the basis that it only applies to males in England (note: England rather than Britain).[29] His theories specifically applied within English contexts of social reform and therefore were not subject to comparative analysis.[30] Marxist critics point out that Marshall's analysis is superficial as it does not discuss the right of the citizen to control economic production, which they argue is necessary for sustained shared prosperity. From a feminist perspective, the work of Marshall is highly constricted in being focused on men and ignoring the social rights of women and impediments to their realisation.[31]

There is a debate among scholars about whether Marshall intended his historical analysis to be interpreted as a general theory of citizenship or whether the essay was just a commentary on developments within England.[32] The essay has been used by editors to promote more equality in society, including the "Black" vote in the US, and against Mrs. Thatcher in a 1992 edition prefaced by Tom Bottomore.[33][page needed] It is an Anglo-Saxon interpretation of the evolution of rights in a "peaceful reform" mode, unlike the revolutionary interpretations of Charles Tilly, the other great theoretician of citizenship in the twentieth century, who bases his readings in the developments of the French Revolution.

Although Marshall was specifically concerned about the class inequalities within capitalist societies and their impact on citizenship, William Wilson and Janet Finch note his neglect of issues pertaining to race and gender relations.[23]

Michael Mann criticized Marshall's theory of citizenship "for being Anglocentric and evolutionist."[34]

Jørgen Møller and Svend-Erik Skaaning argue that Marshall's claim that citizenship rights are extended in a certain order — civil, political, and then social citizenship rights — "is no longer the prevalent one in the developing and transformation countries of the contemporary era."[35]

Other scholars find Marshall's "story of inexorable upward progress" as assuming that all victories for social rights were an "irreversible achievement" rather than the result of "bitter struggles involved in winning basic rights for all."[10]

Marshall's ideas of social citizenship influenced institutions of health and education in addition to setting new rules for minimum wage, hours of labor, working conditions, as well as safety in the workplace and compensation in the event of an accident.[36] However, since capitalism rests on the exploitation and inequality of laborers, the development of social rights challenged this economic system. The state responded to these "opposing interests by granting some rights to the working class" while still preventing them from obtaining greater influence to overthrow the system.[36] Despite designating social rights to the worker and igniting a questioning of "the righteousness of democracy," Marshall's theory of social citizenship "carries on the capitalist expansionism with the veil of equality."[36]

Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays edit

In 1963, Marshall published another renowned work, Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays, which includes a collection of sixteen essays modeled on the work of Max Weber. He structured the essays under three main titles: Sociology of Today and Tomorrow, Social Class, and Social Welfare.[37]

The first several essays focus on the problems facing Sociology in the present day. Marshall sees the discipline as being at a crossroads where several paths meet. The first leads to "universal laws and ultimate values," whereas the second "leads to a collection of a multitude of facts." Finally, the third is one that Marshall recommends as the ideal direction for Sociology. This path "'leads into a country where sociology can choose units of study of manageable size - not society, progress, morals and civilization - but specific social structures in which the basic processes and functions have determined meanings.'" After indicating this path for Sociology, Marshall goes on to define the discipline as the "analytical and explanatory study of social systems" on a larger-scale, such as nations or states and also smaller systems that function within those societies.[37]

Marshall also elaborates on concepts of "class," "social class," "status," "social status," "prestige," "position," and "role," all of which develop his analysis of social stratification. In writing about social conflict, he encourages reserving the term "conflict" for "'cases in which the common interest shared by the rivals dwindles to vanishing point' and 'little regard is paid even to the accepted rules of warfare.'" [37]

The final essays are dedicated to analyzing the concepts and problems of the Welfare State and Affluent Society in England, France, and Germany.[37]

Influence edit

Marshall's analysis developed a deeper understanding of social phenomena and identified the "time and space limitations of concepts," namely what he refers to as the first and second paths in the crossroads of sociology.[37]

Criticisms edit

There is some disagreement regarding Marshall's very broad definition of "social systems," as some find that it covers too many different entities and therefore blurs "the distinction between society and state, and between the whole and the part."[37]

Philosophy of social science edit

Modern political science pioneer Seymour Martin Lipset argues that Marshall proposed a model of social science based on the middle-range theory of social structures and institutions, as opposed to grand theories of the purposes of development and modernisation, which were criticised by modern sociologists such as Robert K. Merton for being too speculative to provide valid results.[38] By using such a middle-range approach, Marshall and his mentor L. T. Hobhouse believed that rigid class distinctions could be dissolved and middle-class citizenship generalised through a careful understanding of social mechanisms. He also believed this would allow sociology to become an international discipline, helping "to increase mutual understanding between cultures" and further international co-operation.[39] While employing some concepts from Marxist conflict theory, such as social class and revolution, Marshall's analyses are based on functionalist concerns with phenomena such as "consensus, the normal, and anomie; co-operation and conflict; structure and growth," within self-contained systems.[40] Rather than studying "society," which may include non-systemic elements, Marshall argues that the task of sociology is:

the analytical and explanatory study of social systems....a set of interrelated and reciprocal activities having the following characteristics. The activities are repetitive and predictable to the degree necessary, first, to permit of purposeful, peaceful and orderly behaviour of the members of the society, and secondly to enable the pattern of action to continue in being, that is to say to preserve its identity even while gradually changing its shape.[41]

Since his work centers around functionalism, Marshall "uses a top-down perspective, by describing how political systems allocate social and political rights to citizens and develop institutions that are in charge of administering these rights."[42]

Whereas Marxists point to the internal contradictions of capital accumulation and class inequality (intra-systemic), Marshall sees phenomena that are anti-systemic as partly "alien" to the social system.[40] Anti-system refers to one of the three branches of social phenomena that Marshall defines in Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays. It posits that conflict is incompatible with the operation of a social system yet is simultaneously an inevitable part of that system. The other two branches are known as "non-system" and "pro-system."[37]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Moses 2019b, p. 163.
  2. ^ Marshall 1973, p. 406.
  3. ^ Mason 2009, p. 95.
  4. ^ Murray 2007, p. 223.
  5. ^ a b c Rocquin 2019, p. 87.
  6. ^ Rose 1996, p. 386.
  7. ^ "T.H. Marshall | English sociologist | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Marshall 1973, p. 399.
  9. ^ Halsey, A.H. (1984). T.H. Marshall: Past and Present 1893-1981: President of the British Sociological Association 1964-1969. Sage Publications, Inc. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Jackson, Ben. "T.H. Marshall". Britannica.
  11. ^ "T.H. [Thomas] Marshall". www.isa-sociology.org. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  12. ^ T.H., Marshall (December 1973). "A British Sociological Career". The British Journal of Sociology. 24 (4): 399–408. doi:10.2307/589730. JSTOR 589730.
  13. ^ a b Bulmer 2007, p. 91.
  14. ^ a b c d Jack Barbalet, "Marshall, Thomas Humphrey (1893–1981)," pp. 2794-96, in George Ritzer (ed.), The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, 10 Vols. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2007, p. 2795.
  15. ^ Blyton 1982, pp. 157–158.
  16. ^ "ISA Past Presidents". Madrid: International Sociological Association. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  17. ^ a b c d T. H.Marshall, Citizenship and Social Class: And Other Essays. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1950, p. 10.
  18. ^ a b T. H.Marshall, Citizenship and Social Class: And Other Essays. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1950, p. 11.
  19. ^ Kivisto 2010.
  20. ^ Marshall, T.H. (1950). Citizenship and Social Class and Other Essays. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 10.
  21. ^ Marc, Hooghe and, Oser, Jennifer (26 April 2017). "Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion: An Empirical Analysis of T.H. Marshall's Concept of Social Rights" (PDF). Government and Opposition. 53: 600 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ Marshall 1973.
  23. ^ a b Turner, Bryan, S. (1984). "Citizenship Today: The Contemporary Relevance of T.H. Marshall". p. 177.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Talcott Parsons, "Full Citizenship for the Negro American? A Sociological Problem." Daedalus Vol. 94, No. 4, The Negro American (1965): 1009-1054.
  25. ^ Flora, Peter, "Rokkan, Stein (1921–79)," pp. 744-47, International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences 2nd edition, Volume 20 (2001), p. 744; Flora, Peter, "Introduction and Interpretation," pp. 1–91, in Peter Flora (ed.), State Formation, Nation-Building, and Mass Politics in Europe: The Theory of Stein Rokkan. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 69.
  26. ^ Anthony Giddens, A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism. Vol. 2. The Nation-State and Violence. Cambridge: Polity, 1985, Ch. 8.
  27. ^ Richard Bellamy. 2015. "Citizenship, Historical Development of". International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, Second Edition, Volume 3: 643–649, p. 647.
  28. ^ Hooghe, Marc and, Oser, Jennifer (26 April 2017). "Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion: An Empirical Analysis of T.H. Marshall's Concept of Social Rights" (PDF). Government and Opposition. 53: 601 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ Fraser, Nancy; Gordon, Linda (July–September 1992). "Contract Versus Charity: Why Is There No Social Citizenship in the United States?". Socialist Review. Vol. 23, no. 3. p. 49.
  30. ^ Bulmer, Martin and Anthony M., Rees (1996). Citizenship Today: The Contemporary Relevance of T.H. Marshall. London: UCL Press. pp. 176–179.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ Turner 1993, pp. 3–4.
  32. ^ Bulmer & Rees 1996, p. 270.
  33. ^ Kivisto 2018.
  34. ^ Michael Mann, "Ruling Class Strategies and Citizenship". Sociology 21(3)(1987): 339-354, 339
  35. ^ Jørgen Møller and Svend-Erik Skaaning. 2010. "Marshall Revisited: The Sequence of Citizenship Rights in the Twenty-first Century." Government and Opposition Vol. 45, No. 4: 457-483, p. 457.
  36. ^ a b c ""What is Citizenship and T.H. Marshall's Theory - Analysis"". Sociology Group.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Sharma, K.N. (1 March 1964). "Sociology at the Crossroads and Other Essays". International Journal of Comparative Sociology: 126. doi:10.1177/002071526400500112. S2CID 143117143.
  38. ^ Lipset 1965, pp. xvii–xviii.
  39. ^ Marshall 1965a, pp. 47–48.
  40. ^ a b Marshall 1965b, p. 33.
  41. ^ Marshall 1965b, p. 28.
  42. ^ Hooghe, Marc and, Oser, Jennifer (26 April 2017). "Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion: An Empirical Analysis of T.H. Marshall's Concept of Social Rights" (PDF). Government and Opposition. 53: 603 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Works cited edit

  • Blyton, P. (1982). "T.H. Marshall, 1893–1981". International Social Science Journal. 91 (1).
  • Bulmer, Martin (2007). "T. H. Marshall". In Scott, John (ed.). Fifty Key Sociologists: The Formative Theorists. Abingdon, England: Routledge. pp. 91–94. doi:10.4324/9780203117279. ISBN 978-0-203-11727-9.
  • Bulmer, Martin; Rees, Anthony M. (1996). "Conclusion: Citizenship in the Twenty-First Century". In Bulmer, Martin; Rees, Anthony M. (eds.). Citizenship Today: The Contemporary Relevance of T. H. Marshall. London: UCL Press.
  • Kivisto, Peter, ed. (2010). Key Ideas in Sociology. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-4833-4333-4.
  •  ———  (2018). "Citizenship: T.H. Marshall and Beyond". In Outhwaite, William; Turner, Stephen (eds.). The SAGE Handbook of Political Sociology. London: SAGE Publications. pp. 413–428. doi:10.4135/9781526416513.n25. ISBN 978-1-5264-1651-3.
  • Lipset, Seymour Martin (1965). Introduction. Class, Citizenship, and Social Development. By Marshall, T. H. (2nd ed.). Garden City, New York: Anchor Books.
  • Marshall, T. H. (1965a). "International Comprehension in Social Science". Class, Citizenship, and Social Development (2nd ed.). Garden City, New York: Anchor Books.
  •  ———  (1965b). "Sociology – The Road Ahead". Class, Citizenship, and Social Development (2nd ed.). Garden City, New York: Anchor Books.
  •  ———  (1973). "A British Sociological Career". The British Journal of Sociology. 24 (4): 399–408. doi:10.2307/589730. ISSN 0007-1315. JSTOR 589730.
  • Mason, Ann C. (2009). "Citizenship Scarcity and State Weakness: Learning from the Colombian Experience". In Raue, Julia; Sutter, Patrick (eds.). Facets and Practices of State-Building. Leiden, Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. pp. 75–103. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004174030.i-344.28. ISBN 978-90-474-2749-0.
  • Moses, Julia (2019a). "The Reluctant Planner: T. H. Marshall and Political Thought in British Social Policy". In Goldman, Lawrence (ed.). Welfare and Social Policy in Britain Since 1870: Essays in Honour of Jose Harris. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 127ff. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198833048.003.0007. ISBN 978-0-19-883304-8.
  •  ———  (2019b). "Social Citizenship and Social Rights in an Age of Extremes: T. H. Marshall's Social Philosophy in the Longue Durée". Modern Intellectual History. 16 (1): 155–184. doi:10.1017/S1479244317000178.
  • Murray, Georgina (2007). "Who Is Afraid of T. H. Marshall? Or, What Are the Limits of the Liberal Vision of Rights?". Societies Without Borders. 2 (2): 222–242. doi:10.1163/187219107X203577. hdl:10072/17742. ISSN 1872-1915. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  • Rocquin, Baudry (2019). British Sociologists and French "Sociologues" in the Interwar Years: The Battle for Society. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-10913-4. ISBN 978-3-030-10912-7. S2CID 165456397.
  • Rose, David (1996). "For David Lockwood". The British Journal of Sociology. 47 (3): 385–396. doi:10.2307/591358. ISSN 1468-4446. JSTOR 591358.
  • Turner, Bryan S., ed. (1993). Citizenship and Social Theory. SAGE Publications.

Further reading (by Marshall) edit

  • Marshall, T. H. (ed.). 1938. Class Conflict and Social Stratification. London: Le Play House Press.
  • Marshall, T. H. 1950. Citizenship and Social Class: And Other Essays. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press.
  • Marshall, T. H. 1963. Sociology at the Crossroads and Other Essays. London: Heinemann.
  • Marshall, T. H. 1973. "A British Sociological Career". International Social Science Journal 25(1/2): 88–100.
  • Marshall, T. H. 1981. The Right to Welfare and Other Essays. London: Heinemann.

Further reading (on Marshall) edit

  • Bulmer, Martin, and Anthony Rees (eds). 1996. Citizenship Today: The Contemporary Relevance of T. H. Marshall. London: Routledge.
  • Crowley, John. 1998. "The National Dimension of Citizenship in T.H. Marshall". Citizenship Studies 2:2: 165–178.
  • Halsey, A. H. 1984. "T. H. Marshall, past and present: 1893-1981". Sociology 18: 1–18.
  • Giddens, Anthony. 1982. Profiles and Critiques of Social Theory. Berkeley: University of California Press, Ch. 12, "Class Division, Class Conflict and Citizenship Rights."
  • Mead, Lawrence M. 1997. "Citizenship and Social Policy: T. H. Marshall and Poverty". Social Philosophy and Policy 14(2): 197–230.
  • Møller, Jørgen, and Svend-Erik Skaaning. 2010. "Marshall Revisited: The Sequence of Citizenship Rights in the Twenty-first Century." Government and Opposition Vol. 45, No. 4: 457–483.
  • Rees, Anthony. 1995. "The Other T. H. Marshall". Journal of Social Policy 24(3): 341–362.
  • Revi, Ben. 2014. "T.H. Marshall and his Critics: Reappraising 'social citizenship' in the Twenty-first Century". Citizenship Studies 18:3-4: 452–464.

External links edit

Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the International Sociological Association
1959–1962
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the British Sociological Association
1964–1969
Succeeded by

marshall, thomas, humphrey, marshall, december, 1893, november, 1981, english, sociologist, best, known, essay, citizenship, social, class, work, citizenship, that, introduced, idea, that, full, citizenship, includes, civil, political, social, citizenship, mar. Thomas Humphrey Marshall 19 December 1893 29 November 1981 was an English sociologist who is best known for his essay Citizenship and Social Class a key work on citizenship that introduced the idea that full citizenship includes civil political and social citizenship 7 T H MarshallMarshall c 1950BornThomas Humphrey Marshall 1893 12 19 19 December 1893London EnglandDied29 November 1981 1981 11 29 aged 87 Cambridge EnglandPolitical partyLabourAcademic backgroundAlma materTrinity College CambridgeInfluencesLujo Brentano 1 L T Hobhouse 2 Academic workDisciplineSociologySub disciplinePolitical sociologysocial stratification 5 School or traditionSocial democracy 3 social liberalism 4 InstitutionsTrinity College CambridgeLondon School of EconomicsNotable works Citizenship and Social Class 1950 Notable ideasSocial citizenshipInfluencedDavid Lockwood 6 Signature Contents 1 Biography 2 Academic research 2 1 Citizenship and Social Class 2 1 1 Influence 2 1 2 Criticisms 2 2 Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays 2 2 1 Influence 2 2 2 Criticisms 3 Philosophy of social science 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Works cited 6 Further reading by Marshall 7 Further reading on Marshall 8 External linksBiography editT H Marshall was born in London on 19 December 1893 to a wealthy artistically cultured family a Bloomsbury family 8 He was the fourth of six children 8 His great grandfather acquired an industrial fortune and his father was a successful architect leaving Marshall with a privileged upbringing and inheritance 9 Because of his wealthy background he obtained a formal education at Rugby School a private boarding school 8 He continued his schooling at Trinity College Cambridge where he studied history 5 Marshall was a civilian prisoner in Germany during the First World War 10 He then went on to pursue a fellowship program at Trinity College in October 1919 where he entered into academia as a professional historian 10 This was interrupted when he became the Labour candidate in Farnham 11 in the 1922 election 5 Despite being unsuccessful in this political campaign Marshall found his endeavors beneficial because they brought him into close contact with working class people and exposed him to the injustices and prejudices within the British class system 10 In A British Sociological Career he recounts that he knew nothing of working class life growing up therefore marking this experience as a transformative awakening to what would guide his work 12 Marshall later became a tutor in social work at the London School of Economics in 1925 13 14 He was promoted to reader and went on to become the head of the Social Science Department at LSE from 1944 to 1949 and Martin White Professorship of Sociology from 1954 to 1956 13 14 Marshall worked for UNESCO as the head of the Social Science Department from 1956 to 1960 15 possibly contributing to the United Nations International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights which was drafted in 1954 but not ratified until 1966 He was the fourth president of the International Sociological Association 1959 1962 16 Marshall died on 29 November 1981 in Cambridge Academic research editCitizenship and Social Class edit T H Marshall wrote a seminal essay on citizenship which became his most famous work titled Citizenship and Social Class This was published in 1950 and was based on a lecture given the previous year British citizenship was originally bestowed upon those of a higher status group with their own civil political and social privileges Yet Marshall argued that with the expansion of capitalism a new kind of citizenship slowly pulled apart the package of privileges hitherto enjoyed exclusively by the well born 10 He analysed the development of citizenship as a development of civil then political then social rights Marshall defined the three aspects of citizenship as follows Civil rights are the rights necessary for individual freedom liberty of the person freedom of speech thought and faith the right to own property and to conclude valid contracts and the right to justice 17 This concept of individual civil rights also undid statutes and customs that constricted the right to work Working people could now legally pursue employment which corresponds with the need of capitalism for labor markets 17 Marshall also argued that the principle of civil citizenship contains within itself a drive toward further equality political equality 17 Political rights refer to the right to participate in the exercise of political power 18 Universal Suffrage 17 Electing representatives to Parliament 10 Social rights include as the right to a modicum of economic welfare and security to the right to share to the fuIl in the social heritage and to live the life of a civilised being 18 Social rights are usually understood as benefits associated with the modern welfare state and positive freedoms such as welfare rights 19 Marshall also argued that these three aspects of citizenship developed in England in a certain order Civil rights are broadly assigned with the eighteenth century political to the nineteenth and social to the twentieth century 20 There is a complex interplay between these conceptions of citizenship According to Marshall once citizens are recognized as full members of society they also receive undeniable social rights such as protection against poverty 21 This expansion of social rights replaced earlier ideas of providing material assistance only as a matter of charity or as under earlier social welfare legislation of making state assistance conditional on recipients forfeiting their civil or political rights 10 Social rights are awarded not on the basis of class or need but rather on the status of citizenship Marshall claimed that the extension of social rights does not entail the destruction of social classes and inequality T H Marshall was a close friend and admirer of Leonard Hobhouse and his conception of citizenship emerged from a series of lectures given by Hobhouse at the LSE Hobhouse is more philosophical whereas Marshall is under the influence of measures taken by Lord Beveridge after the Second World War 22 All of these people were involved in a turn in liberal thought that was called new liberalism a liberalism with a social conscience T H Marshall also talks about industrial citizenship and its relationship with citizenship He said that social rights are a precursor for political and civil rights Among the lasting influences of Citizenship and Social Class is its commentary on capitalism in relation to emerging social rights Marshall noted the contradiction between social rights and the requirements of a market economy within the dynamic context of welfare capitalism where citizenship functioned to contain these conflicts between social classes 23 Class inequality within capitalist societies created tension with Marshall s emerging ideas of citizenship He argues that the creation of social rights are necessary in reducing this tension between civil political economic inequality Marshall saw this process as a struggle unfolding over many centuries and looked to the future in hopes of a more egalitarian society 10 Influence edit Marshall s work on citizenship influenced other scholars Reinhard Bendix s Nation Building and Citizenship 1964 is said to owe much to Marshall and much of it reads like a commentary on Marshall s own treatment of that theme 14 Talcott Parsons s Full Citizenship for the Negro American 1965 24 is held to draw enormously from Marshall 14 Stein Rokkan met Marshall at the London School of Economics and Rokkan s work on citizenship was influenced by Marshall s ideas 25 Anthony Giddens s discussion of citizenship in The Nation State and Violence 1985 builds on Marshall s distinctions and analysis 26 Marshall along with Stein Rokkan is credited with the establishment of what has become the standard narrative of the evolution of modern democratic citizenship 27 Marshall s emphasis on social rights influenced both theoretical literature and policies pursued in the twentieth century 28 Criticisms edit Marshall s analysis of citizenship has been criticised on the basis that it only applies to males in England note England rather than Britain 29 His theories specifically applied within English contexts of social reform and therefore were not subject to comparative analysis 30 Marxist critics point out that Marshall s analysis is superficial as it does not discuss the right of the citizen to control economic production which they argue is necessary for sustained shared prosperity From a feminist perspective the work of Marshall is highly constricted in being focused on men and ignoring the social rights of women and impediments to their realisation 31 There is a debate among scholars about whether Marshall intended his historical analysis to be interpreted as a general theory of citizenship or whether the essay was just a commentary on developments within England 32 The essay has been used by editors to promote more equality in society including the Black vote in the US and against Mrs Thatcher in a 1992 edition prefaced by Tom Bottomore 33 page needed It is an Anglo Saxon interpretation of the evolution of rights in a peaceful reform mode unlike the revolutionary interpretations of Charles Tilly the other great theoretician of citizenship in the twentieth century who bases his readings in the developments of the French Revolution Although Marshall was specifically concerned about the class inequalities within capitalist societies and their impact on citizenship William Wilson and Janet Finch note his neglect of issues pertaining to race and gender relations 23 Michael Mann criticized Marshall s theory of citizenship for being Anglocentric and evolutionist 34 Jorgen Moller and Svend Erik Skaaning argue that Marshall s claim that citizenship rights are extended in a certain order civil political and then social citizenship rights is no longer the prevalent one in the developing and transformation countries of the contemporary era 35 Other scholars find Marshall s story of inexorable upward progress as assuming that all victories for social rights were an irreversible achievement rather than the result of bitter struggles involved in winning basic rights for all 10 Marshall s ideas of social citizenship influenced institutions of health and education in addition to setting new rules for minimum wage hours of labor working conditions as well as safety in the workplace and compensation in the event of an accident 36 However since capitalism rests on the exploitation and inequality of laborers the development of social rights challenged this economic system The state responded to these opposing interests by granting some rights to the working class while still preventing them from obtaining greater influence to overthrow the system 36 Despite designating social rights to the worker and igniting a questioning of the righteousness of democracy Marshall s theory of social citizenship carries on the capitalist expansionism with the veil of equality 36 Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays edit In 1963 Marshall published another renowned work Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays which includes a collection of sixteen essays modeled on the work of Max Weber He structured the essays under three main titles Sociology of Today and Tomorrow Social Class and Social Welfare 37 The first several essays focus on the problems facing Sociology in the present day Marshall sees the discipline as being at a crossroads where several paths meet The first leads to universal laws and ultimate values whereas the second leads to a collection of a multitude of facts Finally the third is one that Marshall recommends as the ideal direction for Sociology This path leads into a country where sociology can choose units of study of manageable size not society progress morals and civilization but specific social structures in which the basic processes and functions have determined meanings After indicating this path for Sociology Marshall goes on to define the discipline as the analytical and explanatory study of social systems on a larger scale such as nations or states and also smaller systems that function within those societies 37 Marshall also elaborates on concepts of class social class status social status prestige position and role all of which develop his analysis of social stratification In writing about social conflict he encourages reserving the term conflict for cases in which the common interest shared by the rivals dwindles to vanishing point and little regard is paid even to the accepted rules of warfare 37 The final essays are dedicated to analyzing the concepts and problems of the Welfare State and Affluent Society in England France and Germany 37 Influence edit Marshall s analysis developed a deeper understanding of social phenomena and identified the time and space limitations of concepts namely what he refers to as the first and second paths in the crossroads of sociology 37 Criticisms edit There is some disagreement regarding Marshall s very broad definition of social systems as some find that it covers too many different entities and therefore blurs the distinction between society and state and between the whole and the part 37 Philosophy of social science editModern political science pioneer Seymour Martin Lipset argues that Marshall proposed a model of social science based on the middle range theory of social structures and institutions as opposed to grand theories of the purposes of development and modernisation which were criticised by modern sociologists such as Robert K Merton for being too speculative to provide valid results 38 By using such a middle range approach Marshall and his mentor L T Hobhouse believed that rigid class distinctions could be dissolved and middle class citizenship generalised through a careful understanding of social mechanisms He also believed this would allow sociology to become an international discipline helping to increase mutual understanding between cultures and further international co operation 39 While employing some concepts from Marxist conflict theory such as social class and revolution Marshall s analyses are based on functionalist concerns with phenomena such as consensus the normal and anomie co operation and conflict structure and growth within self contained systems 40 Rather than studying society which may include non systemic elements Marshall argues that the task of sociology is the analytical and explanatory study of social systems a set of interrelated and reciprocal activities having the following characteristics The activities are repetitive and predictable to the degree necessary first to permit of purposeful peaceful and orderly behaviour of the members of the society and secondly to enable the pattern of action to continue in being that is to say to preserve its identity even while gradually changing its shape 41 Since his work centers around functionalism Marshall uses a top down perspective by describing how political systems allocate social and political rights to citizens and develop institutions that are in charge of administering these rights 42 Whereas Marxists point to the internal contradictions of capital accumulation and class inequality intra systemic Marshall sees phenomena that are anti systemic as partly alien to the social system 40 Anti system refers to one of the three branches of social phenomena that Marshall defines in Sociology at a Crossroads and Other Essays It posits that conflict is incompatible with the operation of a social system yet is simultaneously an inevitable part of that system The other two branches are known as non system and pro system 37 See also editCitizenship Legal membership in a country T H Marshall s Social Citizenship sociological essay about citizenshipPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Social citizenship Welfare state Form of government Reinhard Bendix German American sociologist 1916 1991 Stein Rokkan Norwegian sociologist 1921 1979 References editFootnotes edit Moses 2019b p 163 Marshall 1973 p 406 Mason 2009 p 95 Murray 2007 p 223 a b c Rocquin 2019 p 87 Rose 1996 p 386 T H Marshall English sociologist Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 21 June 2022 a b c Marshall 1973 p 399 Halsey A H 1984 T H Marshall Past and Present 1893 1981 President of the British Sociological Association 1964 1969 Sage Publications Inc p 1 a b c d e f g h Jackson Ben T H Marshall Britannica T H Thomas Marshall www isa sociology org Retrieved 16 October 2021 T H Marshall December 1973 A British Sociological Career The British Journal of Sociology 24 4 399 408 doi 10 2307 589730 JSTOR 589730 a b Bulmer 2007 p 91 a b c d Jack Barbalet Marshall Thomas Humphrey 1893 1981 pp 2794 96 in George Ritzer ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology 10 Vols Malden MA Blackwell Publishing 2007 p 2795 Blyton 1982 pp 157 158 ISA Past Presidents Madrid International Sociological Association Retrieved 4 December 2020 a b c d T H Marshall Citizenship and Social Class And Other Essays Cambridge Eng Cambridge University Press 1950 p 10 a b T H Marshall Citizenship and Social Class And Other Essays Cambridge Eng Cambridge University Press 1950 p 11 Kivisto 2010 Marshall T H 1950 Citizenship and Social Class and Other Essays Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 10 Marc Hooghe and Oser Jennifer 26 April 2017 Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion An Empirical Analysis of T H Marshall s Concept of Social Rights PDF Government and Opposition 53 600 via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Marshall 1973 a b Turner Bryan S 1984 Citizenship Today The Contemporary Relevance of T H Marshall p 177 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Talcott Parsons Full Citizenship for the Negro American A Sociological Problem Daedalus Vol 94 No 4 The Negro American 1965 1009 1054 Flora Peter Rokkan Stein 1921 79 pp 744 47 International Encyclopedia of the Social amp Behavioral Sciences 2nd edition Volume 20 2001 p 744 Flora Peter Introduction and Interpretation pp 1 91 in Peter Flora ed State Formation Nation Building and Mass Politics in Europe The Theory of Stein Rokkan Oxford UK Oxford University Press 1999 p 69 Anthony Giddens A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism Vol 2 The Nation State and Violence Cambridge Polity 1985 Ch 8 Richard Bellamy 2015 Citizenship Historical Development of International Encyclopedia of the Social amp Behavioral Sciences Second Edition Volume 3 643 649 p 647 Hooghe Marc and Oser Jennifer 26 April 2017 Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion An Empirical Analysis of T H Marshall s Concept of Social Rights PDF Government and Opposition 53 601 via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Fraser Nancy Gordon Linda July September 1992 Contract Versus Charity Why Is There No Social Citizenship in the United States Socialist Review Vol 23 no 3 p 49 Bulmer Martin and Anthony M Rees 1996 Citizenship Today The Contemporary Relevance of T H Marshall London UCL Press pp 176 179 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Turner 1993 pp 3 4 Bulmer amp Rees 1996 p 270 Kivisto 2018 Michael Mann Ruling Class Strategies and Citizenship Sociology 21 3 1987 339 354 339 Jorgen Moller and Svend Erik Skaaning 2010 Marshall Revisited The Sequence of Citizenship Rights in the Twenty first Century Government and Opposition Vol 45 No 4 457 483 p 457 a b c What is Citizenship and T H Marshall s Theory Analysis Sociology Group a b c d e f g Sharma K N 1 March 1964 Sociology at the Crossroads and Other Essays International Journal of Comparative Sociology 126 doi 10 1177 002071526400500112 S2CID 143117143 Lipset 1965 pp xvii xviii Marshall 1965a pp 47 48 a b Marshall 1965b p 33 Marshall 1965b p 28 Hooghe Marc and Oser Jennifer 26 April 2017 Social and Political Citizenship in European Public Opinion An Empirical Analysis of T H Marshall s Concept of Social Rights PDF Government and Opposition 53 603 via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Works cited edit Blyton P 1982 T H Marshall 1893 1981 International Social Science Journal 91 1 Bulmer Martin 2007 T H Marshall In Scott John ed Fifty Key Sociologists The Formative Theorists Abingdon England Routledge pp 91 94 doi 10 4324 9780203117279 ISBN 978 0 203 11727 9 Bulmer Martin Rees Anthony M 1996 Conclusion Citizenship in the Twenty First Century In Bulmer Martin Rees Anthony M eds Citizenship Today The Contemporary Relevance of T H Marshall London UCL Press Kivisto Peter ed 2010 Key Ideas in Sociology SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 4833 4333 4 2018 Citizenship T H Marshall and Beyond In Outhwaite William Turner Stephen eds The SAGE Handbook of Political Sociology London SAGE Publications pp 413 428 doi 10 4135 9781526416513 n25 ISBN 978 1 5264 1651 3 Lipset Seymour Martin 1965 Introduction Class Citizenship and Social Development By Marshall T H 2nd ed Garden City New York Anchor Books Marshall T H 1965a International Comprehension in Social Science Class Citizenship and Social Development 2nd ed Garden City New York Anchor Books 1965b Sociology The Road Ahead Class Citizenship and Social Development 2nd ed Garden City New York Anchor Books 1973 A British Sociological Career The British Journal of Sociology 24 4 399 408 doi 10 2307 589730 ISSN 0007 1315 JSTOR 589730 Mason Ann C 2009 Citizenship Scarcity and State Weakness Learning from the Colombian Experience In Raue Julia Sutter Patrick eds Facets and Practices of State Building Leiden Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 75 103 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004174030 i 344 28 ISBN 978 90 474 2749 0 Moses Julia 2019a The Reluctant Planner T H Marshall and Political Thought in British Social Policy In Goldman Lawrence ed Welfare and Social Policy in Britain Since 1870 Essays in Honour of Jose Harris Oxford Oxford University Press pp 127ff doi 10 1093 oso 9780198833048 003 0007 ISBN 978 0 19 883304 8 2019b Social Citizenship and Social Rights in an Age of Extremes T H Marshall s Social Philosophy in the Longue Duree Modern Intellectual History 16 1 155 184 doi 10 1017 S1479244317000178 Murray Georgina 2007 Who Is Afraid of T H Marshall Or What Are the Limits of the Liberal Vision of Rights Societies Without Borders 2 2 222 242 doi 10 1163 187219107X203577 hdl 10072 17742 ISSN 1872 1915 Retrieved 4 December 2020 Rocquin Baudry 2019 British Sociologists and French Sociologues in the Interwar Years The Battle for Society Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1007 978 3 030 10913 4 ISBN 978 3 030 10912 7 S2CID 165456397 Rose David 1996 For David Lockwood The British Journal of Sociology 47 3 385 396 doi 10 2307 591358 ISSN 1468 4446 JSTOR 591358 Turner Bryan S ed 1993 Citizenship and Social Theory SAGE Publications Further reading by Marshall editMarshall T H ed 1938 Class Conflict and Social Stratification London Le Play House Press Marshall T H 1950 Citizenship and Social Class And Other Essays Cambridge Eng Cambridge University Press Marshall T H 1963 Sociology at the Crossroads and Other Essays London Heinemann Marshall T H 1973 A British Sociological Career International Social Science Journal 25 1 2 88 100 Marshall T H 1981 The Right to Welfare and Other Essays London Heinemann Further reading on Marshall editBulmer Martin and Anthony Rees eds 1996 Citizenship Today The Contemporary Relevance of T H Marshall London Routledge Crowley John 1998 The National Dimension of Citizenship in T H Marshall Citizenship Studies 2 2 165 178 Halsey A H 1984 T H Marshall past and present 1893 1981 Sociology 18 1 18 Giddens Anthony 1982 Profiles and Critiques of Social Theory Berkeley University of California Press Ch 12 Class Division Class Conflict and Citizenship Rights Mead Lawrence M 1997 Citizenship and Social Policy T H Marshall and Poverty Social Philosophy and Policy 14 2 197 230 Moller Jorgen and Svend Erik Skaaning 2010 Marshall Revisited The Sequence of Citizenship Rights in the Twenty first Century Government and Opposition Vol 45 No 4 457 483 Rees Anthony 1995 The Other T H Marshall Journal of Social Policy 24 3 341 362 Revi Ben 2014 T H Marshall and his Critics Reappraising social citizenship in the Twenty first Century Citizenship Studies 18 3 4 452 464 External links editCatalogue of the Marshall papers held at LSE Archives Thomas Humphrey Marshall at the National Portrait Gallery LondonProfessional and academic associationsPreceded byGeorges Friedmann President of the International Sociological Association1959 1962 Succeeded byRene KonigPreceded byBaroness Wootton of Abinger President of the British Sociological Association1964 1969 Succeeded byThomas Bottomore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title T H Marshall amp oldid 1177361605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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