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The Workfare State - Public Assistance Politics from the New Deal to the New Democrats (Paperback)
Loot Price: R793
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The Workfare State - Public Assistance Politics from the New Deal to the New Democrats (Paperback)
Series: American Governance: Politics, Policy, and Public Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the Great Recession of 2007-2009, the United States suffered the
most sustained and extensive wave of job destruction since the
Great Depression. When families in need sought help from the safety
net, however, they found themselves trapped in a system that
increasingly tied public assistance to private employment. In The
Workfare State, Eva Bertram recounts the compelling history of the
evolving social contract from the New Deal to the present to show
how a need-based entitlement was replaced with a work-conditioned
safety net, heightening the economic vulnerability of many poor
families. The Workfare State challenges the conventional
understanding of the development of modern public assistance
policy. New Deal and Great Society Democrats expanded federal
assistance from the 1930s to the 1960s, according to the standard
account. After the 1980 election, the tide turned and Republicans
ushered in a new conservative era in welfare politics. Bertram
argues that the decisive political struggles took place in the
1960s and 1970s, when Southern Democrats in Congress sought to
redefine the purposes of public assistance in ways that would
preserve their region's political, economic, and racial order. She
tells the story of how the South-the region with the nation's
highest levels of poverty and inequality and least generous social
welfare policies-won the fight to rewrite America's antipoverty
policy in the decades between the Great Society and the 1996
welfare reform. Their successes provided the foundation for leaders
in both parties to build the contemporary workfare state-just as
deindustrialization and global economic competition made low-wage
jobs less effective at providing income security and mobility.
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