Welfare politics have now been part of American life for four centuries. Beyond a persistent general idea that Americans have a collective obligation to provide for the poorest among us, there has been little common ground on which to forge political and philosophical consensus. Are poor people poor because of their own shortcomings and moral failings, or because of systemic societal and economic obstacles? That is, does poverty have individual or structural causes? This book demonstrates why neither of these two polemical stances has been able to prevail permanently over the other and explores the public policy--and real-life--consequences of the stalemate. Author Greg M. Shaw pays special attention to the outcome of the 1996 act that was...
Christopher Jencks, Rethinking Social Policy: Race, Poverty and the Underclass. Cambridge: Harvard U...
Book note for John Tropman, Does America Hate the Poor? The Other American Dilemma. Westport, CT: Pr...
Let me first take this opportunity to thank Karl Widerquist for bringing The Failed Welfare Revoluti...
This chapter is part of a book that sheds much-needed light on the ideology and impacts of recent we...
In the mid-1980s, the popularity of Charles Murray\u27s anti-welfare treatise Losing Ground signaled...
Welfare reform has been the recurrent subject of heated debate in the United States, culminating in ...
With the passage of the 1996 welfare reform, not only welfare, but poverty and inequality have disap...
In August 1996, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act was signed into law with the pr...
This article introduces the Urban Welfare Reform symposium materials, giving a broad overview of are...
Copyright © 2016, The Honors Undergraduate Research Journal, University of Oklahoma. All rights reve...
America\u27s Misunderstood Welfare State: PersistentM yths, Enduring Realities. By Theodore R. Marmo...
This is a review of Steven M. Teles\u27s book, Whose Welfare? AFDC and Elite Politics (University Pr...
This Article presents a theoretical model for analyzing welfare policy choices, a model that seeks b...
A new book by John Hills explores key issues in the current debate about ‘welfare’ and the welfare s...
The Yale Law and Policy Review makes an important and timely contribution by devoting these two issu...
Christopher Jencks, Rethinking Social Policy: Race, Poverty and the Underclass. Cambridge: Harvard U...
Book note for John Tropman, Does America Hate the Poor? The Other American Dilemma. Westport, CT: Pr...
Let me first take this opportunity to thank Karl Widerquist for bringing The Failed Welfare Revoluti...
This chapter is part of a book that sheds much-needed light on the ideology and impacts of recent we...
In the mid-1980s, the popularity of Charles Murray\u27s anti-welfare treatise Losing Ground signaled...
Welfare reform has been the recurrent subject of heated debate in the United States, culminating in ...
With the passage of the 1996 welfare reform, not only welfare, but poverty and inequality have disap...
In August 1996, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act was signed into law with the pr...
This article introduces the Urban Welfare Reform symposium materials, giving a broad overview of are...
Copyright © 2016, The Honors Undergraduate Research Journal, University of Oklahoma. All rights reve...
America\u27s Misunderstood Welfare State: PersistentM yths, Enduring Realities. By Theodore R. Marmo...
This is a review of Steven M. Teles\u27s book, Whose Welfare? AFDC and Elite Politics (University Pr...
This Article presents a theoretical model for analyzing welfare policy choices, a model that seeks b...
A new book by John Hills explores key issues in the current debate about ‘welfare’ and the welfare s...
The Yale Law and Policy Review makes an important and timely contribution by devoting these two issu...
Christopher Jencks, Rethinking Social Policy: Race, Poverty and the Underclass. Cambridge: Harvard U...
Book note for John Tropman, Does America Hate the Poor? The Other American Dilemma. Westport, CT: Pr...
Let me first take this opportunity to thank Karl Widerquist for bringing The Failed Welfare Revoluti...