900
THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY
Bulletin of the Department of Labor, 785 Biisch, 598 Bushnefl, C. J., 868 Butterworth, Benjamin, 52
Caen, Lvon, 3
Caine, Hall, 646
Caird, 650
Cairnes, 654
Canrobert, 2
CAPITAL. See Labor, Political Economy
Carlyle, J. G., 274, 453, 470, 513, 516
Carlyle, Thomas, 474, 561, 564, 647, 648, 649
Carstanjen, Fr., 323 ab
Cams, Paul, 107
Chadwick, Edwin, 80
Chaix, 57
Chalmers, Thomas, 133, 135
Chamberlain, A. F., 316 bk
Champion, 41
Channing, W. E., 564
CHARITIES. Proceedings of the National Con- ference of Charities and Correction, 125-7 bk; Function of the Nat. Conference, 123 ; evils of mixing public and private charities, 126 ; The Poor in Great Cities, 136 bk; Principles of Public Charity and of Private Philan- thropy in Germany, 589-605 ar, 680-08 ar; general conclusions as to, 590 ; Eiberfeld system, 592, 596-603, 686-7 voluntary svstem of France and Italy, 594 ; reform of, in 'Hamburg, 681 ; working of German system, 688-91 ; care of children, 692; private, in America, 694; public vs. private, 696 ; duplication of, 697, prevention better than cure, 697 ; In praise of charity, 887 ab; Public assistance (Paris), 887 ab
Chauquet, 6
CHILD -SAVING. In Germany 66,692; The plac- ing out of pauper children, 140 ab; inade- quacy of present, 190. ( See also Boys, Charities, Criminology)
CHILD STUDY. Child Study, 14-2 ab
CHRISTIANITY. Social movement and, 202; The social -evangelical movement in Germany, 482 ab; Christianity and Social Problems, 609 bk; Social Christianity, its method, 618 ab; The principles of social Christianity, 618 ab; Those -without God and the social question, 619 ab; Christian Life in Germany as Seen in the State and Church, 751 bk; Social Christianity, 881 ab. (See also Churches, Young Men's Christian Association, Religion)
CHRISTIAN SOCIOLOGY. Christian Sociology, 108- 17 ar; 274^87 ar; 416-32 ar; Jesus not an as- cetic, 108 ; observed social customs, no ; his friend- ships, in ; upheld rational social equality, 112-17; sympathy for lower classes, 207; emphasized duties instead of rights, 275 ; did not appeal to the aesthetic, 276 ; nor to enlightened self-inter- est, 277 ; recognizes physical wants, 278 ; but makes them secondary to spiritual, 279 ; spiritual wants as social forces, 280-9; core of Jesus' social doctrines, 416 ; no specific instructions as to reforms, 416; taught a gradual evolution of morality, through Christian teaching, 119-32; The New Obedience, 879 bk; social programme based on literal interpretation of Jesus' teach- ings, 880. Chrysostom, 484
CHURCHES, THE. In Germany, 61, 71 ; The Func- tions of the Church, 220-33 ar - Function of the church in the abstract, 220-5; concrete pro- gramme for church work, 225-33; Attitude of the Church to some of the Social Problems of TownLife,i\Wbk; The Expansion of Reli- gion. 318 bk; sanctions of, no longer binding, 350; democracy in American, 403; function of
church-going, 829; neglect of opportunities by, 874
CITIES. Municipal Control in Switzerland, 37 ; growth of, in Germany, 58; Methods of Deter- mining the Economic Productivity of Mu- nicipal Enterprises, 378-91 ar; statistics of gas production, 383, 385-91; city and country life compared, 485-9
Clapperton, Jane H., 86 1
Clarke, 649, 654
Clay, Henry, 638
Cleveland, Grover, 135, 465, 607. 850
CLIMATE. Influence of, 857
Closson, C. C., 154 ab
Cobden, Richard, 645, 647
Coleridge, S. T., 645-8
COLLECTIVISM. See Cooperation
COLLEGE SETTLEMENTS. See Settlements
Collingwood, W. G.,6 53
Commons, J. R., 476, 871
COMMUNISM. Mutual aid amongst modern men, 152 ab
Comte, Auguste. 82, 148, 239, 447, 463, 567, 647, 648, 649, 650, 711, 726, passim sup
Confucius, 558, 833
Conkling, Roscoe, 465
CONSUMPTION. See Political Economy
Cook, 290
Cooke, 654
COOPERATION. Distributive, at Ivorydale, 51 ; The cooperative movement in France, 151 ab; Proudhon and the principles of the exchange bank, 330 ab: Communism and, 644; birth and growth of, 647, 651
Copernicus, 7 sup.
Courcel, Baron, 3
Courtney, W. L., 651
Cousin, 564
Cox, H.,6 5 8
Craig, Oscar, 136
Cremer, Randall, 3
CRIMINOLOGY AND PENOLOGY. The German inner mission and criminals, 64 ; Punishment of reci- divist criminals, 143 ab; Crime increased by the lax enforcement of law, 145 ab; Crime and punishment, 325 ab; Immigration and Crime, 369-77 ar; Immigration and crime, 483 ab; Juvenile Offenders, 737-9 bk; increase of crime, 737, 882 ; effect of environment, 737 ; methods of repression, 738; Juvenile Criminals the school and press^&'z ab; liquor question and, 885 ; Condemnation of criminals and punishment, 886 ab; Crime and the census, 890 ab
Cromwell, Oliver, 122, 124, 216, 402, 564, 806 CROWDS. See Sociology Cudwprth, 248
Cunningham, William, 454, 456, 655, 660 Curti, Theodor, 888 ab Cusack, Thomas, 363
D'Ajano, R. l&.^z^ab
Darwin, Charles, 84, 298, 453, 484, 651, Passim sup
Davids, Rhys, 100
Davidson, John, wjab
Dawson, W. H.,6i
Debs, Eugene, 147, 623
De Coulanges, Fustel, 437, 470, 609, 870
DEFECTIVES. Care of, in Germany, 63
De Foe, Daniel, 713
DeFoville,3
DEGENERATION. Genius and Degeneration, 873
bk
De Grafenried, Clare, 190-201 ar De Greef, 309, 462 De Laveleye, Emile, 484
DEMOCRACY. Primitive democracy in British