Explain the importance of a muckraker and what they did The muckrakers were reform-minded journalists, writers, and photographers in the Progressive Era in the United States who claimed to expose corruption and wrongdoing in established institutions, often through sensationalist publications. There have been many muckrakers just like Mitford during the early 1900s who helped expose corruption and wrongdoing.
Also acknowledge the other side too in the intro THREE BODY PARAGRAPHS (THREE DIFFERENT BENEFITS), trying to organize them chronologically EVIDENCE: BENEFIT 1: Improved …show more content…
Her advocacy laid the groundwork for women's reproductive rights and contributed to advancements in family planning and women's health. (https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/margaret-sanger) Quote/summary: Quote: Although Congress began investigating drug purity in the 1840s, it was during the Progressive Era that it approved the first federal regulations protecting consumers’ health and safety. When Upton Sinclair [a muckraking journalist]’s 1906 novel The Jungle revealed food adulteration and unsanitary practices in meat production, public outrage prompted Congress to establish federal responsibility for public health and welfare. (The Pure Food and Drug Act) Explanation: (how did it benefit societal issues) BENEFIT 2: Worker’s rights (Economical) "How the Other Half Lives" by Jacob Riis highlighted the living conditions of immigrants in urban slums, prompting reforms in tenement housing. QUOTE: Muckraking police reporter, whose seminal 1890 work, “How the Other Half Lives,” prompted legislative reforms, focused attention on the desperate lives of poor urban immigrants and left an enduring mark on