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Welfare Reform - Tribal Tanf Allows Flexibility to Tailor Programs, But Conditions on Reservations Make It Difficult to Move Recipients (Paperback)
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Welfare Reform - Tribal Tanf Allows Flexibility to Tailor Programs, But Conditions on Reservations Make It Difficult to Move Recipients (Paperback)
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List price R413
Loot Price R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
You Save R73 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act gives Native American Indian tribes the option
to administer Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
programs, either alone or as part of a consortium with other
tribes, rather than receiving benefits and services from state TANF
programs. Because of the difficult economic circumstances on many
reservations, the law also gives tribal TANF programs more
flexibility than it gives to states. Tribes have used various
strategies to stimulate economic development, but despite these
efforts, unemployment and poverty rates on reservations remain high
and prospects for economic growth may be limited. To improve
economic conditions on reservations, tribes operate enterprises in
a range of commercial sectors. Nationally, the number of American
Indian families receiving TANF assistance has declined in recent
years; however, in some states, American Indians represent a large
and increasing share of the state TANF caseload. To date, 174
tribes, either alone or as part of a consortium, are administering
their own TANF programs and have used the flexibility in the act to
tailor their tribal TANF programs to meet TANF requirements.
However, many tribes have found that TANF caseload and unemployment
data on American Indians is inaccurate, complicating the
determination of TANF grant amounts for tribal programs and making
it difficult to design and plan such programs. Tribes also lack the
infrastructure, such as automated information systems, to
administer their programs efficiently. Because tribes lack
experience administering welfare programs, they have turned to both
states and the federal government for assistance.
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