Self-Sufficiency for Poor Families

Self-Sufficiency for Poor Families
Author:
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 84
Release: 1994
Genre:
ISBN: 9780788102172

Examines how housing & social service policies affect beneficiaries, particularly persons receiving public assistance, when such beneficiaries gain employment & experience a rise in income. Also analyzes the extent to which existing laws regarding housing & other programs create disincentives to upward income mobility. Charts & tables. Also includes a 30-page report by the Nat. Research Council, Institute of Medicine: New Findings on Children, Families, & Economic Self-Sufficiency: Summary of a Research BriefingÓ (1995).

Factors Associated with Self-sufficiency in Low-income Women

Factors Associated with Self-sufficiency in Low-income Women
Author: Abby M. Laib
Publisher:
Total Pages: 30
Release: 2011
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

Self-sufficiency has been a debated construct for many years. Some debate that self-sufficiency is obtained with work and freedom from dependence on social programs while others believe it is a multi-faceted construct with an undertone of a sense of progress towards goals and accomplishments. A better understanding of the self-sufficiency construct is needed in order to better evaluate social programs related to moving low-income individuals from poverty to self sufficiency and to help guide government policies and funding. The current study is a secondary analysis of data from Illinois Family Study collected during wave three and examines factors believed to be associated with self-sufficiency in low-income women. The factors examined were depression, physical functioning, substance abuse, social support, neighborhood problems, employment stability and highest grade obtained. Results showed that these factors accounted for 47% of the variance in the self-sufficiency construct in the sample of N=719 low-income women.

Women in Poverty

Women in Poverty
Author: Jeb King
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1988
Genre: Occupational training for women
ISBN:

This report provides information about programs that can be replicated and resources that can be tapped to design and implement strategies for helping women on welfare become productive employees. The first part describes major welfare programs in the United States and welfare-to-work programs initiated in selected states over the past several years. State profiles are presented for Massachusetts, New York, California, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. A brief compilation of the programs available throughout the United States is given in a table showing the status of welfare-to-work programs in the 50 states. The second part of the report features case studies of employment and training programs oriented to welfare recipients in 15 communities around the nation. They include Toledo, Ohio; Coffeyville, Kansas; Chautauqua, New York; Wausau, Wisconsin; Arkansas; Charleston, West Virginia; Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin; Phoenix, Arizona; Allentown, Pennsylvania; St. Paul, Minnesota; Albuquerque, New Mexico; St. Johnsbury, Vermont; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; St. Paul, Minnesota; and New York, New York. Appendixes provide a directory of welfare-to-work program contacts in each state and a bibliography. (YLB)

Shut Out

Shut Out
Author: Valerie Polakow
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0791484971

Shut Out portrays in vivid detail the economic, educational, and existential struggles that single mothers confront as they fight back against a welfare-to-work regime that denies them access to higher education and obstructs their aspirations as autonomous women, determined to exit poverty and attain family self-sufficiency. The book is a unique blend of policy analysis and lived realities. The voices of student mothers fighting to stay in school, and organizing for a different future, are embedded in an analysis grounded in the educational experiences of women in poverty across the states. Harsh and punitive public policies that are designed to keep poor women trapped in low wage work are juxtaposed against the actions of those who, together with their allies, have resisted—inspired by a vision of a different world made possible by higher education. Contributing authors discuss the provisions of the 1996 "welfare reform" (PRWORA) Act and the myriad of statewide responses to educational options within the framework of national legislation. In documenting the multiple obstacles and policy restrictions that low income women face, the book also highlights successful state programs, institutional practices, and community-based programs that afford low income women educational opportunities. The afterword summarizes recent legislative developments and makes policy and advocacy recommendations for the future.

Blessed are the Poor?

Blessed are the Poor?
Author: Pamela D. Couture
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1991
Genre: Religion
ISBN:

The decade of the '80s saw a growing rift between the rich and the poor in the United States. Poverty increased among women with children--the so-called "female-headed family"--more rapidly than among any other population group. Couture's work argues that the tradition of self-sufficiency has contributed to the growth of women's poverty, and instead supports a policy of interdependence.