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Backlash against Welfare Mothers. Past and Present
Ellen Reese
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July 2005 - Backlash against Welfare Mothers is a forceful examination of how and why a state-level revolt against welfare, begun in the late 1940s, was transformed into a national-level assault that destroyed a critical part of the nation's safety net, with tragic consequences for American society. With a wealth of original research, Ellen Reese puts recent debates about the contemporary welfare backlash into historical perspective. She provides a closer look at these early antiwelfare campaigns, showing why they were more successful in some states than others and how opponents of welfare sometimes targeted Puerto Ricans and Chicanos as well as blacks for cutbacks. Her research reveals both the continuities and changes in American welfare opposition from the late 1940s to the present.

Reese brings new evidence to light that reveals how large farmers and racist politicians, concerned about the supply of cheap labor, appealed to white voters' racial resentments and stereotypes about unwed mothers, blacks, and immigrants in the 1950s. She then examines congressional failure to replace the current welfare system with a more popular alternative in the 1960s and 1970s, which paved the way for national assaults on welfare.

Taking a fresh look at recent debates on welfare reform, she explores how and why politicians competing for the white vote and right-wing think tanks promoting business interests appeased the Christian right and manufactured consent for cutbacks through a powerful, racially coded discourse. Finally, through firsthand testimonies, Reese vividly portrays the tragic consequences of current welfare policies and calls for a bold new agenda for working families.

Ellen Reese is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Riverside.

Praise for Backlash against Welfare Mothers:

"Reese's masterful study sheds new light on the contemporary welfare backlash by reconstructing the dynamics of an earlier wave of attacks on welfare mothers half a century ago, a history that has long been obliterated from public memory. Her powerful, lucid state-level comparative analysis of the 1950s exposes the critical role of conservative low-wage employers (mainly in agriculture) in launching the anti-welfare campaigns of that era, and she goes on to show how a broader coalition of low-wage employers played the same role in the recent backlash. This is a major contribution to the historical sociology of welfare and deserves a wide readership." --Ruth Milkman, author of Gender at Work

"This book provides a powerful new understanding of the right-wing attacks on Aid to Families with Dependent Children, the United States's major welfare program that was ultimately dismantled in 1996. Reese's rich historical account sheds important new light on our nation's compassionless conservatism." --Fred Block, University of California, Davis

"Thoughtful and extremely well-researched, Backlash Against Welfare Mothers re-examines and sheds new light on the origins of the current welfare "crisis." Reese shows the tragic consequences for welfare families and calls for a New Deal for Working Families. This book could not be more timely." --Joel Handler, author of The Poverty of Welfare Reform

Backlash against Welfare Mothers. Past and Present
Ellen Reese
Hardcover:$50.00, £32.50 0-520-24461-3
Paperback:$19.95, £12.95 0-520-24462-1
372 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 2 line illustrations, 9 tables
July 2005
Available worldwide

For more information, contact:

University of California Press
(510) 642-4247
http://www.ucpress.edu



 
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