The poverty rate for children in the United States exceeds that of all other Western, industrialised nations except Australia. Moreover, poverty among children has increased substantially since 1970, affecting more than one-fifth of US children. These persistent high rates require new ideas in both research and public policy. Escape from Poverty presents such ideas. Four modes of possible change are addressed: mothers' employment, child care, father involvement, and access to health care. It examines the implications of these new policy-driven changes for children. The editors have developed an interdisciplinary perspective, involving demographers, developmental psychologists, economists, health experts, historians, and sociologists - a framework essential for addressing the complexities inherent in the links between the lives of poor adults and children in our society.
This is a book of things that I wish I had been taught at a much younger age than I finally learned them. I do mean to say taught, instead of just simply told in passing, as there is a difference. ...
A rigorous defense of free markets and open enterprise in the tradition of Adam Smith.During the 20thcentury, Vietnam and Poland were both victims not only of devastating wars, but also of socialist...