Broken Homes - A Study of Family Desertion and its Social Treatment by Joanna C. Colcord
page 5 of 158 (03%)
page 5 of 158 (03%)
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IV. FINDING THE DESERTING HUSBAND 65
V. FURTHER ITEMS IN THE INVESTIGATION 91 VI. THE DETAILS OF TREATMENT 106 VII. THE DETAILS OF TREATMENT (_Continued_) 125 VIII. THE HOME-STAYING NON-SUPPORTER 149 IX. NEXT STEPS IN CORRECTIVE TREATMENT 164 X. NEXT STEPS IN PREVENTIVE TREATMENT 185 INDEX 201 BROKEN HOMES I INTRODUCTION It has frequently been said that desertion is the poor man's divorce but, like many epigrams, this one hardly stands the test of experience. When examined closely it is neither illuminating nor, if the testimony of social case workers can be accepted, is it true. It is true, of course, that many of the causes of domestic infelicity which lead to divorce among the well-to-do may bring about desertion among the less fortunate, but the deserting man does not, as a rule, consider his absences from home as anything so final and definite as divorce. In a study of desertion made by the Philadelphia Society for Organizing Charity in 1902,[1] it was found that 87 per cent of the men studied |
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