Carnegie Council On Children. Records 1972-1980

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Carnegie Council On Children. Records 1972-1980

The Carnegie Council on Children was an independent study commission established in 1972 by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The Council undertook a comprehensive examination of the position and needs of children in American society and formulated a series of recommendations for new directions in public policy towards children and families. Conclusions reached by Council members and associates were published in several background studies and summarized in the Council's final report, All Our Children: The American Family Under Pressure (1977). The records of the Carnegie Council on Children include correspondence, minutes, working papers, book manuscripts, press releases, press clippings, tape recordings, and photographs.

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SNAC Resource ID: 6637393

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Carnegie council on children

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Established in 1972 by the Carnegie Corporation as an independent commission to examine the needs of children in American society and to recommend changes in public policy regarding children and families. Kenneth Keniston was chairman and director of the Council. From the description of Records, 1972-1980 (inclusive). (University of Chicago Library). WorldCat record id: 52250097 The Carnegie Council on Children had its origins in the Yale Faculty Study Group on ...