Poverty and Public Policy

Poverty and Public Policy

Author: Vincent T. Covello

Publisher:

Published: 1980

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Monograph comprising literature surveys on social research issues of poverty in the USA - assesses empirical evidence such as guaranteed income, income redistribution, determinants of income level, labour force participation, racial discrimination and social mobility, social status attainment, interaction with social services, etc., discusses theoretical and political aspects of poverty research, and makes a comparison of Western European and USA approaches. Bibliographys and statistical tables.


The Greatest of Evils

The Greatest of Evils

Author: Joel A. Devine

Publisher: Transaction Publishers

Published:

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 9780202369716

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The debate on persisting poverty in the United States, somewhat dampened for the past decade, has now been fully rekindled. Devine and Wright have entered that debate with an analysis that is both quantitative and qualitative, informed on the one side by urban ethnography and steeped in official statistics and relevant data on the other. The result is an incisive and cogently documented narrative account leading to policy recommendations for a new president and a new era. In The Greatest of Evils, Devine and Wright develop three principal themes. First they argue that poverty is by no means monolithic: each subgroup within the population in poverty tends to have different problems. Secondly, the so-called "underclass" within the poverty population represents a new and especially corrosive development, one that cannot be analyzed in traditional terms nor dealt with in traditions ways. Thirdly, the War on Poverty of the Sixties was not the unmitigated disaster that so many have come to believe, and offered a boldness of vision that today's poverty policies tend to lack. In exploring these themes, the authors show how the social and economic costs of poverty-related problems exceed what it will cost to find remedies that address the underlying causes of residual poverty.