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EN
The article is based on the results of the PROFIT project collected during research conducted in Poland by the research team from University of Lódz. It summarizes main findings from all qualitative research stages: interviews with parliamentary politicians, who are in charge of creation and implementation of social policy; group interviews with local stakeholders who are responsible for the social affairs in towns under study and in-depth interviews with young adults who are end-users of the social policy. The authors also make an attempt to present some recommendations for policy makers, based on the research outcomes.
EN
The article presents Stefan Pawlicki's (1839-1916) views on social policy. Stefan Pawlicki was a catholic priest, philosopher and the head of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. He was one of the ancestors of the catholic thought on social policy in Poland, the editor of a periodical 'Ruch Spoleczny' (The Social Movement) and a founder of an association 'Towarzystwo Pielegnowania Nauk Spolecznych' (The Association Caring of Social Sciences Development) in Kraków, at the beginning of 20th century. According to Stefan Pawlicki, the discipline of social policy should be seen as a part of philosophy. The first reason is the use of similar cognitive methods. The second reason is social policy's close connection to ethics. Stefan Pawlicki's academic focus was the theory of a social question (kwestia socjalna). He stated that neither liberalism nor socialism may find a solution to the social question. As Pawlicki stressed in his works from the end of 19th century, the only way out of a social question is the broad ethical renewal on the basis of Christian solidarity.
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