Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Co-operative community

Co-operative community the peasant is estimated as having fallen by 20%. So it is not so hard to understand why so many swung over to the Japanese and then when they found this failed them they s~rung back to Britain, and yet they do not want the British to return. If ynu look at the history of these countries first it is puzzling and you wonder why they want to stand alone, but if you look deeper and Gee how the West has actually affected the social life of the ordinary Bur.man from the village, you understand the difference between economic progress and social welfare. The West has taught skills and the techni~ues of competitive trade and the rule of law. They have been important in producing progress but often with very different consequences when transferred to the East. There is a danger that in our eagerness to give help we may make mistakes similar to those of the past hundred years. Today European nations are preoccupied with their own problems, and the U.S.A. is more likely to represent the We~t in East Asia. The U.S.A. has a dominant faith in the virtues of competition although there is an increased awareness http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian Journal of Social Work Taylor & Francis

Co-operative community

Australian Journal of Social Work , Volume 4 (1): 2 – May 1, 1950

Co-operative community

Abstract

the peasant is estimated as having fallen by 20%. So it is not so hard to understand why so many swung over to the Japanese and then when they found this failed them they s~rung back to Britain, and yet they do not want the British to return. If ynu look at the history of these countries first it is puzzling and you wonder why they want to stand alone, but if you look deeper and Gee how the West has actually affected the social life of the ordinary Bur.man from the village, you understand the...
Loading next page...
 
/lp/taylor-francis/co-operative-community-H4BdTwZM04
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
ISSN
0004-9565
DOI
10.1080/03124075008522507
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

the peasant is estimated as having fallen by 20%. So it is not so hard to understand why so many swung over to the Japanese and then when they found this failed them they s~rung back to Britain, and yet they do not want the British to return. If ynu look at the history of these countries first it is puzzling and you wonder why they want to stand alone, but if you look deeper and Gee how the West has actually affected the social life of the ordinary Bur.man from the village, you understand the difference between economic progress and social welfare. The West has taught skills and the techni~ues of competitive trade and the rule of law. They have been important in producing progress but often with very different consequences when transferred to the East. There is a danger that in our eagerness to give help we may make mistakes similar to those of the past hundred years. Today European nations are preoccupied with their own problems, and the U.S.A. is more likely to represent the We~t in East Asia. The U.S.A. has a dominant faith in the virtues of competition although there is an increased awareness

Journal

Australian Journal of Social WorkTaylor & Francis

Published: May 1, 1950

There are no references for this article.