America's Poor and the Great Recession
America's Poor and the Great Recession
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Author(s): Graham, John D.
Seefeldt, Kristin
Seefeldt, Kristin S.
ISBN No.: 9780253009746
Pages: 178
Year: 201301
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 28.98
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"The Kristin Seefeldt and John Graham primer on the state of America's poor in the wake of the Great Recession of 2007 to 2009 cuts through Beltway theater and provides a clear picture of the magnitude of poverty of the United States as well as the patchwork nature of social services targeting the poor."-- Journal of Policy Analysis and Management "All in all, Seefeldt and Graham fulfill their primary goal since they do manage to present a book which can be used as a 'readable [] supplementary text in undergraduate and graduate courses' . on poverty and social policy in the U.S. at present. Moreover, precisely because the work offers substantial evidence and thoroughly systematized data about these social phenomena but also provokes questions and debates on these pressing political issues, it may well serve as a guide for future research and may equally prove instrumental in triggering novel responses by both researchers and policy makers."-- European Journal of American Studies "Kristen S. Seefeldt and John D.


Graham have produced a thorough and enlightening survey of the impact and legacy of the Great Recession on low-income Americans, and the 'safety net' of philanthropic and government programmes on which they rely. [Their] prose remains accessible and readable even whilst negotiating an array of statistics and complex layers of state and federal government programmes."-- Journal of American Studies "This book is an important inquiry into the impact of 'The Great Recession' on America's precious poor citizens. Don't miss it!"--Cornel West, Class of 1943 University Professor, Princeton University "The Great Recession was long and deep and the recovery has been very slow for the unemployed and the poor. Instead of focusing on policies for promoting opportunity and reducing poverty, politicians have focused only on reducing the long-run federal deficit. Seefeldt and Graham document how the public and private safety nets, especially the 2009 stimulus, responded to the Great Recession and kept poverty from rising even higher. Most importantly, they suggest many promising policy options that would better protect the poor from the vagaries of the 21st-century economy."--Sheldon Danziger, H.


J. Meyer Distinguished University Professor of Public Policy, University of Michigan.


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