Promise of Welfare Reform

About The Book

<p>Find out howand whylegislation has made economic rights more important than human rights<br><br>Since 1996 politicians and public officials in the United States have celebrated the success of welfare reform legislation despite little if any evidence to support their claims. The Promise of Welfare Reform: Political Rhetoric and the Reality of Poverty in the Twenty-First Century presents articles from 23 community practitioners and researchers who challenge the reform that has turned public aid from a right to a privilege. The authors transcend conventional academic writing offering careful and thoughtful analysis that examines the history of welfare reform its connection to poverty family issues and the impact of racism on poverty and on the treatment of the poor.<br><br>The Promise of Welfare Reform analyzes the consequences over the past ten years of legislative changes made to the public assistance program formerly known as Aid to Families with Dependant Children (AFDC). This powerful book examines the social political and economic context of welfare reform including the elimination of poverty as a societal goal how racial and ethic groups have been targeted popular stereotypes about the poor and their work ethic anti-immigrant hostility the struggles of single mothers with children domestic violence and marriage as a realistic escape from poverty. The book’s authors address the need for empathy and understanding to change public sentiments about welfare and poverty. <br><br>Contributors to The Promise of Welfare Reform include:</p><ul> <li> Elizabeth A. Segal and Keith M. Kilty co-founding editors of the <i>Journal of Poverty</i> (Haworth) <br> </li> <li> Frances Fox Piven co-author of <i>Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare</i><br> </li> <li> Ann Withorn co-editor of <i>For Crying Out Loud: Women’s Poverty in the United States</i><br> </li> <li> Mimi Abramovitz author of <i>Under Attack Fighting Back: Women and Welfare in the United States</i><br> </li> <li> Joel Blau co-author with Mimi Abramovitz of <i>The Dynamics of Social Welfare Policy</i> <br> </li> <li> Margaret K. Nelson author of <i>The Social Economy of Single Mothers: Raising Children in Rural America</i> <br> </li> <li> Gwendolyn Mink co-editor of <i>Welfare: A Documentary History of U.S. Policy and Politics</i><br> </li> <li> Kenneth J. Neubeck co-author of <i>Welfare Racism: Playing the Race Card Against America’s Poor</i> <br> </li> <li> Lynn Fujiwara author of <i>Sanctioning Immigrants: Asian Immigrant Women and the Racial Politics of Welfare Reform</i> <br> </li> <li> Nancy C. Jurik author of <i>Bootstrap Dreams: U.S. Microenterprise Developments in an Era of Welfare Reform</i> <br> </li> <li> and much more!</li> </ul><p>The Promise of Welfare Reform challenges current views on welfare reform and promotes alternative methods to alleviate poverty. It is an essential resource for sociologists political scientists economists public policy and management specialists social welfare and human services workers and anyone else concerned about changes made to public assistance by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996.</p>
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