Without a Safety Net. / Barbara Ehrenreich and Frances Fox Piven.
by Ehrenreich, Barbara; SIRS Publishing, Inc.
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REF SIRS 2003 Fam10 Hitting Home. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam11 Making Time for a Baby. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam12 Who's My Birth Father?. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam13 Without a Safety Net. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam14 The State of Matrimony: Can Marriage Be Taught?. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam15 The Mating Game. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam16 The Baby Bias. / |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
Originally Published: Without a Safety Net, May/June 2002; pp. 34-41.
"In 1996, when welfare reform was enacted, a recession seemed about as likely as the destruction of the World Trade Center by a handful of men armed with box cutters. The assumptions behind welfare reform were, one, that a job could lift a family out of poverty and, two, that there would always be enough jobs for anyone plucky enough to go out and land one." (MOTHER JONES) This article examines the consequences of welfare reform during this time when many people, especially single women, have lost their jobs.
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