The War Against the Poor
The Underclass and Antipoverty Policy
June 1996
Trade Paperback · 208 Pages
$19.00 U.S. · $23.00 CAN · £12.99 U.K. · €13.99 E.U.
ISBN 9780465019915
Basic Books
Trade Paperback · 208 Pages
$19.00 U.S. · $23.00 CAN · £12.99 U.K. · €13.99 E.U.
ISBN 9780465019915
Basic Books
Recommended for These Courses
Description
In his withering dissection of the origins and misuse of the term underclass to stereotype and stigmatize the poor, Herbert J. Gans shows how this ubiquitous label has relegated a wide variety of people — welfare recipients, the working poor, teenage mothers, drug addicts, the homeless, and others — to a single condemned class, feared and despised by the rest of society. Probing the deep psychological, social, and political reasons why Americans seek to indict millions of poor citizens as undeserving, Gans calls for a cease-fire in the undeclared war against the poor. He concludes with a set of innovative, job-centered policy proposals and a multifaceted educational plan to stop the endless flow of new recruits into America's untouchable caste.
About the Author
Herbert J. Gans, author of Levittowners and The Urban Villagers, is professor of sociology at Columbia University and the former president of the American Sociological Association.
