The Missing Middle: Working Families and the Future of American Social Policy

Pirmais vāks
W. W. Norton & Company, 2000 - 207 lappuses
In the opening pages of this powerful examination of American politics, Theda Skocpol reveals a curious pattern: Our politicians argue over programs for the very poor or tax cuts for the very rich, and they worry over the precarious security of our longer-living grandparents and the educational neglect and corresponding bleak future of our children. But, with the spotlight on the youngest, the oldest, the richest, and the poorest, rarely do we find policies concerned with average working men and women of modest means, those the author terms the "missing middle." Skocpol draws us into the history of this disturbing trend and reveals the repercussions of the increasingly simplistic and moralistic stands being taken by our politicians. Taking lessons from the root causes of this shift, she presents a compelling case for family-oriented populism and identifies the bold reforms needed to revitalize American democracy.
 

Atlasītās lappuses

Saturs

The Missing Middle
3
How Americans Forgot the Formula for Successful Social Policy
22
The Uneasy Security of Our Grandparents
59
Our Children and Their Overstretched Parents
102
Reaching for the Middle What It Will Take to Build a FamilyFriendly America
140
Notes
173
Index
197
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Par autoru (2000)

Theda Skocpol is professor of government and sociology at Harvard University and the author of Boomerang: Health Care Reform and the Turn Against Government.

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