You are here

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

Reforming Welfare, Redefining Poverty
Share
Share

Reforming Welfare, Redefining Poverty



September 2001 | 156 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc

"The overall purpose of this volume is to present welfare reform in the context of a bigger set of political, economic, and policy shifts and to examine how it forces us to reconceptualize poverty and antipoverty policies as well as to rethink the possibilities and limits of the U.S. welfare state. Since those most affected by welfare are single mothers, communities of color, and poor families, we also consider welfare changes in light of how they both mask and reveal gender, race, and class relations in the United States. In short, we think that the arguments here make the case for ending welfare reform as we know it. They provide part of a vision for a more dependable and responsive state, assuming that that a democratic social movement must also be part of ending the economic and political bases for poverty."

- FROM THE PREFACE by Randy Albelda and Ann Withhorn

There has always been a storm of controversy regarding welfare in America, and for that matter, on a global level. Who should qualify, under what guidelines, and how and in what form should compensation be delivered? This issue of The Annals takes a long, hard, and sometimes hypercritical look at the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) and the present state of welfare in America. While not raising the banner for a return to the past, there is presented the postulation that the present welfare situation is inefficiently attending to people in need, particularly along gender and racial lines.

Under an ever widening gap between the haves and have-nots in the United States, and the world at large, many world governments are bent to define as an integral remedy, a globalized economy. That concept is taken at issue as seriously flawed and the authors attempt to dissect the more salient problems, in that poverty and any welfare system that supports it, or the lack thereof, is far more complex than can be solved merely by higher gross national product.

The many facets of poverty and its effect on class relationships, race, gender, families, single mothers, children and individual rights, are explored and examined to capture an expanding range of critical issues and provide scholarly and crucial commentary to the quality of human existence as well as the political and global necessities that demand a second opinion as to whether we as a country, and the world at large, are "doing the right thing" for people in crisis.


 
CONTENTS
Randy Albelda and Ann Withorn
Preface
Linda Gordon
Who Deserves Help? Who Must Provide?
Frances Fox Piven
Globalization, American Politics, and Welfare Policy
Linda Burnham
Welfare Reform, Family Hardship, and Women of Color
Sanford F. Schram and Joe Soss
Success Stories
Welfare Reform, Policy Disclosure, and the Politics of Research

 
Randy Albelda
Fallacies of Welfare-to-Work Policies
Gwendolyn Mink
Violating Women
Rights Abuses in the Welfare Police State

 
Ames Jennings
Welfare Reform and Neighborhoods
Race and Civic Participation

 
Ann Withorn
Friends or Foes?
Nonprofits and the Puzzle of Welfare Reform

 
Mimi Abramovitz
Learning from the History of Poor and Working-Class Women's Activism
Lucie E. White
Closing the Care Gap that Welfare Reform Left Behind
Willie Baptist and Mary Bricker-Jenkins
A View from the Bottom
Poor People and Their Allies Respond to Welfare Reform

 

Select a Purchasing Option


Hardcover
ISBN: 9780761925118
$105.00

Paperback
ISBN: 9780761925125
$46.00