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Leader |
LDR
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cam a 00 |
Control # |
1
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2001041785 |
Control # Id |
3
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DLC |
Date |
5
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20190911110538.0 |
Fixed Data |
8
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010619s2001 nyu b 001 0 eng |
LC Card |
10
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$a 2001041785 |
ISBN |
20
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$a0871542455 |
Obsolete |
39
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$a209075$cTLC |
Cat. Source |
40
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$aDLC$cDLC$dDLC$dGCG |
Authen. Ctr. |
42
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|
$apcc |
LC Call |
50
|
00 |
$aHV741$b.F66 2001 |
Dewey Class |
82
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00 |
$a362.7/0973$221 |
Title |
245
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00 |
$aFor better and for worse :$bwelfare reform and the well-being of children and families /$cGreg J. Duncan, P. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale, editors. |
Imprint |
260
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$aNew York :$bRussell Sage Foundation,$cc2001. |
Phys Descrpt |
300
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$aviii, 329 p. ;$c22 cm. |
Note:Bibliog |
504
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$aIncludes bibliographical references and index. |
Note:Content |
505
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00 |
$gPART I. INTRODUCTION AND POLICY CONTEXT -- 1. For better and for worse: welfare reform and the well-being of children and families / Greg J. Duncan and P. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale -- 2. $tLiberal and conservative influences on the welfare reform legislation of 1996 /$rRon Haskins -- $gPART II. WHAT STATES ARE THINKING AND DOING: 3. $tWelfare reform, management systems, and policy theories of child well-being /$rCathy M. Johnson, $rThomas L. Gais -- $g4. $tHow do state policymakers think about family processes and child development in low-income families? /$rKristin Anderson Moore -- $g5. $tProgram redesign by states in the wake of welfare reform: making sense of the effects of devolution /$rAlan Weil -- $g6. $tSanctions and exits: what states know about families that leave welfare because of sanctions and time limits /$rJack Tweedie -- $gPART III. HOW FAMILIES AND CHILDREN ARE FARING: 7. $tHow different are welfare and working families? And do these differences matter for children's achievement? /$rGreg J. Duncan, $rRachel E. Dunifon, $rMorgan B. Ward Doran, $rW. Jean Young -- $g8. $tMy children come first: welfare-reliant women's post-TANF [Temporary Assistance to Needy Families] views of work-family trade-offs and marriage /$rEllen K. Scott, $rKathryn Edin, $rAndrew S. London, $rJoan Maya Mazelis -- $g9. $tDoes maternal employment mandated by welfare reform affect children's behavior? /$rAriel Kalil, $rRachel E. Dunifon, $rSandra K. Danzier -- $g10. $tLessons from New Hope: the impact on children's well-being of a work-based antipoverty program for parents /$rRashmita S. Mistry, $rDanielle A. Crosby, $rAletha C. Huston, $rDavid M. Casey, $rMarika n. Ripke -- $g11. $tHow families view and use lump-sum payments from the earned income tax credit /$rJennifer L. Romich, $rThomas S. Weisner -- $g12. $tWelfare waivers and nonmarital childbearing /$rAnn E. Horvath-Rose, $rH. Elizabeth Peters -- $gPART IV. POLICY APPROACHES AND OPTIONS FOR THE FUTURE: 13. $tReducing child poverty by improving the work-based safety net /$rWendell Primus, $rKristina Daugirdas -- $g14. $tEffects of welfare reform at four years /$rRon Haskins -- $g15. $tReforming the social family contract: public support for child rearing in the United States /$rPaula England, $rNancy Folbre -- $g16. $tLessons learned /$rP. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale, $rGreg J. Duncan. |
Local Note |
590
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$aRecommended in Resources for College Libraries |
Subj:Topical |
650
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0 |
$aChild welfare$zUnited States. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aFamily services$zUnited States. |
Subj:Topical |
650
|
0 |
$aPublic welfare$zUnited States. |
AE:Pers Name |
700
|
1 |
$aDuncan, Greg J. |
AE:Pers Name |
700
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1 |
$aChase-Lansdale, P. Lindsay. |