The new politics of poverty : the nonworking poor in America / Lawrence M. Mead.
1992
HC110.P6 M34 1992 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
The new politics of poverty : the nonworking poor in America / Lawrence M. Mead.
Published
New York, NY : BasicBooks, [1992]
Copyright
©1992
Call Number
HC110.P6 M34 1992
ISBN
0465059627 :
Description
xii, 356 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)24870864
Summary
Thirty years ago, the great national issue was how to help ordinary, workaday Americans achieve the good things in life. Today, we are preoccupied with--and increasingly divided over--how to cope with the problems of poor and dependent Americans, most of whom do not work. The growth in the number of nonworking poor people--and the failure of traditional social reforms to bring them back into the mainstream--has transformed American politics beyond recognition. According to Lawrence Mead, one of this country's leading poverty experts, whose writings have helped shift national welfare policy toward work requirements, we are faced today with a new dependency politics, where the issue is no longer whether there are enough jobs for the poor but why so many poor either cannot or will not work at the jobs available. Throughout the West a politics of morals and personal conduct is driving out older disputes over workers and the organization of society. Mead provides overwhelming and disturbing evidence that passive poverty--the failure of most of the poor to work at all--reflects defeatism more than lack of opportunity. This demoralization of the poor has alienated them from the working majority, with tragic consequences both for them and for America.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 262-345) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
Ch. 1
Introduction
1
Ch. 2
The Crisis of Reform
25
Ch. 3
The Costs of Nonwork
48
Ch. 4
Low Wages and Hard Times
66
Ch. 5
Are Jobs Available?
85
Ch. 6
Barriers to Employment
110
Ch. 7
Human Nature
133
Ch. 8
Policy
159
Ch. 9
Welfare Reform
185
Ch. 10
The Wider Meaning of Dependency
210
Ch. 11
The Prospect
240
Notes
262
Index
346