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The Supportive State - Families, the State, and American Political Ideals (Paperback)
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The Supportive State - Families, the State, and American Political Ideals (Paperback)
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There is broad agreement among politicians and policymakers that
the family is a critical institution of American life. Yet the role
that the state should play with respect to family ties among
citizens remains deeply contested. This controversy over the
state's role undergirds a broad range of public policy debates:
Does the state have a responsibility to help resolve conflicts
between work and family? Should same-sex marriage be permitted?
Should the state encourage marriage and two-parent families? Should
parents who receive welfare benefits be required to work? Yet while
these individual policy issues are endlessly debated, the
underlying theoretical question of the stance that the state should
take with families remains largely unexplored. In The Supportive
State: Families, Government, and America's Political Ideals, Maxine
Eichner argues that government must take an active role in
supporting families. She contends that the respect for human
dignity at the root of America's liberal democratic understanding
of itself requires that the state not only support individual
freedom and equality-the goods generally considered as grounds for
state action in liberal accounts. It must also support families,
because it is through families that the caretaking and human
development needs which must be satisfied in any flourishing
society are largely met. Families' capacity to satisfy these needs,
she demonstrates, is critically affected by the framework of
societal institutions in which they function. In the "supportive
state" model she develops, the state bears the responsibility for
structuring societal institutions to support families in performing
their caretaking and human development functions. Meanwhile,
families bear responsibility for the day-to-day caring for (or
arranging the care for) family members with dependency needs. In
this model, supporting families is as central to the
responsibilities of the state as ensuring a competent police force
to ensure citizens' safety. Although not all family forms will
further the important functions that warrant state support, she
argues that a broad range will. Her vigorous defense of the state's
responsibility to enhance families' capacity for caretaking and
human development stands as a sharp rejoinder to the widespread
conservative belief that the state's role in family life must be
diminished in order for families to flourish.
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