I am so happy to join all of you in celebrating and honoring Peter\u27s life and work. Even for those of us who knew Peter only a little - from a few phone conversations and faxes, conferences or chance meetings - or who knew him only through his work and reputation, he has had a profound impact. News of Peter\u27s death spread through the public interest community with such intensity, an electric charge of terrible sorrow transmitted by e-mail and phone calls. Listservs filled up with remembrances of him from advocates and students and activists all over the country. We knew that we had lost not merely a superb intellect, but an unrelentingly warm heart and an invincible spirit, all captured in this person who inspired us to go on with our...
Do we as relatively affluent human beings have a moral duty to give to those who have less than us ?...
In 2001, University Professor, William Julius Wilson of Harvard University, delivered the Georgetown...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...
Thank you so much, Mary Louise. I am deeply honored that you asked me to be here today with you and ...
I am honored to deliver a lecture in memory of Edward Sobota, especially because such distinguished ...
As we approach the 10-year anniversary of the signing of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opport...
In August of 1996, in an effort to end welfare as we know it , Congress passed the Personal Respons...
Proponents of work-based welfare reform claim that moving the poor from welfare to work will advance...
Peter Leonard, Postmodern Welfare: Reconstructing an Emancipatory Project. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage P...
In one sense, Joel Schwartz\u27s new effort, Fighting Poverty with Virtue, is tremendously timely. B...
The current deterioration of the American economy is bringing new attention to the problem of povert...
On the horizon a huge wave is building, about to crash down on the poorest most hard pressed familie...
There are certain people who have a special aura about them, who have a light that shines brighter, ...
A Review of Joel F. Handler, The Poverty of Welfare Reform and Mark Robert Rank, Living on the Edge:...
During the 1992 presidential campaign, Candidate Clinton promised, in Putting People First, to make...
Do we as relatively affluent human beings have a moral duty to give to those who have less than us ?...
In 2001, University Professor, William Julius Wilson of Harvard University, delivered the Georgetown...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...
Thank you so much, Mary Louise. I am deeply honored that you asked me to be here today with you and ...
I am honored to deliver a lecture in memory of Edward Sobota, especially because such distinguished ...
As we approach the 10-year anniversary of the signing of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opport...
In August of 1996, in an effort to end welfare as we know it , Congress passed the Personal Respons...
Proponents of work-based welfare reform claim that moving the poor from welfare to work will advance...
Peter Leonard, Postmodern Welfare: Reconstructing an Emancipatory Project. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage P...
In one sense, Joel Schwartz\u27s new effort, Fighting Poverty with Virtue, is tremendously timely. B...
The current deterioration of the American economy is bringing new attention to the problem of povert...
On the horizon a huge wave is building, about to crash down on the poorest most hard pressed familie...
There are certain people who have a special aura about them, who have a light that shines brighter, ...
A Review of Joel F. Handler, The Poverty of Welfare Reform and Mark Robert Rank, Living on the Edge:...
During the 1992 presidential campaign, Candidate Clinton promised, in Putting People First, to make...
Do we as relatively affluent human beings have a moral duty to give to those who have less than us ?...
In 2001, University Professor, William Julius Wilson of Harvard University, delivered the Georgetown...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...