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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Political Science: Terms And Concepts > liberalism
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liberalism, Political Science: Terms And Concepts

Related Category: Political Science: Terms And Concepts

By 1900, L. T. Hobhouse and T. H. Green began to look to the state to prevent oppression and to advance the welfare of all individuals. Liberal thought was soon stating that the government should be responsible for providing the minimum conditions necessary for decent individual existence. In the early 20th cent. in Great Britain and France and later in the United States, the welfare state came into existence, and social reform became an accepted governmental role.

In the United States minimum wage laws, progressive taxation, and social security programs were all instituted, many initially by the New Deal, and today remain an integral part of modern democratic government. While such programs are also advocated by socialism, liberalism does not support the socialist goal of complete equality imposed by state control, and because it is still dedicated to the primacy of the individual, liberalism also strongly opposes communism. Current liberal goals in the United States include integration of the races, sexual equality, and the eradication of poverty.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Jeremy Bentham
bourgeoisie
communism
conservatism
Enlightenment
feudalism
Thomas Hill Green
Leonard Trelawney Hobhouse
integration
laissez-faire
John Locke
Marxism
John Stuart Mill
New Deal
Reformation
David Ricardo
Adam Smith
socialism

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Political Science and Government
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