Beatrix Hoffman
Northern Illinois University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Beatrix Hoffman.
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era | 2003
Beatrix Hoffman
Frederick Ludwig Hoffman, statistician and insurance executive, was a formidable opponent of the emerging welfare state during the Progressive Era. As a vice president of the Prudential Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, Hoffman led a relentless campaign against proposals for government-ran compulsory health insurance between 1915 and 1920. While he acted in the interests of his insurance company employer, Hoffmans opposition also arose from his ardent beliefs about the nature of welfare states. Social insurance and other forms of state-organized assistance, Hoffman claimed, represented “alien governmental theories” based on “paternalism and coercion,” especially since they originated in autocratic Germany, where in 1885 Chancellor Otto von Bismarck had created the worlds first sickness insurance system. “In so far as our right to oppose compulsory health insurance is concerned,” explained Hoffman, “it [is] the duty of every American to oppose German ideas of government control and state socialism.” In the anti-German atmosphere engendered by the First World War, his arguments had particular resonance.
American Journal of Public Health | 2003
Beatrix Hoffman
Archive | 2012
Beatrix Hoffman
Archive | 2011
Beatrix Hoffman; Nancy Tomes; Rachel Grob; Mark Schlesinger
Social Science History | 2006
Beatrix Hoffman
Journal of Health Politics Policy and Law | 2006
Beatrix Hoffman
Social Science History | 2006
Beatrix Hoffman
Archive | 2006
Beatrix Hoffman
Journal of Policy History | 2004
Beatrix Hoffman
Dissent | 2018
Beatrix Hoffman