They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back! Welfare Activism in an Era of Retrenchment (American Sociological Association's Rose Series) Buy on Amazon

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They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back! Welfare Activism in an Era of Retrenchment (American Sociological Association's Rose Series)

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Book Details

Author(s)Ellen Reese
ISBN / ASIN0871547147
ISBN-139780871547149
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank727,417
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

In 1996, President Bill Clinton hailed the end of welfare as we know it when he signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act. The law effectively transformed the nation s welfare system from an entitlement to a work-based one, instituting new time limits on welfare payments and restrictions on public assistance for legal immigrants. In They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back! Ellen Reese offers a timely review of welfare reform and its controversial design, now sorely tested in the aftermath of the Great Recession. The book also chronicles the largely untold story of a new grassroots coalition that opposed the law and continues to challenge and reshape its legacy.
While most accounts of welfare policy highlight themes of race, class, and gender, They Say Cut Back examines how welfare recipients and their allies contested welfare reform from the bottom up. Using in-depth case studies of campaigns in Wisconsin and California, Reese argues that a crucial phase in policymaking unfolded after the bill s passage. As countries and states set out to redesign their welfare programs, activists scored significant victories by lobbying officials at different levels of American government through media outreach, protests, and organizing. Such efforts tended to enjoy more success when based on broad coalitions that cut across race and class, drawing together a shifting alliance of immigrants, public sector unions, feminists, and the poor. The book tracks the tensions and strategies of this unwieldy group brought together inadvertently by their opposition to four major aspects of welfare reform: immigrants benefits, welfare-to-work politics, privatization of welfare agencies, and child care services. Success in scoring reversals was uneven and subject to local demographic, political, and institutional factors. In California, for example, workfare policies created a large and concentrated pool of new workers that public sector unions could organize in campaigns to change policies. In Wisconsin, by contrast, such workers were scattered and largely placed in private sector jobs, leaving unions at a disadvantage. Large Latino and Asian immigrant populations in California successfully lobbied to restore access to public assistance programs, while mobilization in Wisconsin remained more limited. On the other hand, the unionization of child care providers succeeded in Wisconsin but failed in California because of contrasting gubernatorial politics. With vivid descriptions of the new players and alliances in each of these campaigns, Reese paints a nuanced and complex portrait of the modern American welfare state.
At a time when more than 40 million Americans live in poverty, They Say Cut Back offers a sobering assessment of the nation s safety net. As policymakers confront budget deficits and a new era of austerity, this book provides an authoritative guide for both scholars and activists looking for lessons to direct future efforts to change welfare policy.

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