Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2111-7 • Paperback • February 2002 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-4386-9 • eBook • February 2002 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Sylvia Ann Hewlett is founder and chairman of the National Parenting Association. Her books include A Lesser Life, When the Bough Breaks, and co-author with Cornel West of The War Against Parents. Nancy Rankin is the former executive director of the National Parenting Association. Cornel West is the Alphonse Fletcher Jr. University Professor at Harvard University. He is the author of numerous articles and books including Prophetic Fragments, Race Matters, and The War Against Parents, co-authored with Sylvia Hewlett.
Chapter 1 Foreword: The Challenge
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 The Cultural Marketplace
Chapter 4 On Rekindling a Spirit of "Home Training": A Mother's Notes from the Front
Chapter 5 Empty Parenthood: The Loss of Parental Authority in the Postmodern Family
Chapter 6 From Father Knows Best to The Simpsons—On TV, Parenting Has Lost Its Halo
Part 7 The Economic Marketplace
Chapter 8 The Economic Status of Parents in Postwar America
Chapter 9 Time Crunch Among American Parents
Chapter 10 Low-Income Parents and the Time Famine
Part 11 The Political Marketplace
Chapter 12 Political Trends Among American Parents: The 1950s to 1996
Chapter 13 Taxes and the Family: A Conservative Perspective
Chapter 14 Observations on Some Proposals to Help Parents: A Progressive Perspective
Chapter 15 Back to the Future: A GI Bill for the 21st Century
Part 16 Building Public Will and Political Power to Help Parents
Chapter 17 The Paths from Here
Chapter 18 What It Will Take to Build a Family-Friendly America
Chapter 19 The Emerging Fatherhood Movement: Making Room for Daddy
Chapter 20 The Parent Vote
Chapter 21 Fixing Social Insecurity: A Proposal to Finance Parenthood
Part 22 Conclusion: Taking Parenting Public
An impressive list of contributors has brought these critical issues about parenting to our attention in a cogent and persuasive way. I highly recommend this book for leaders in the public and private sectors who must consider both the economic and social impacts of this issue on our families and our nation.
— Bob Kerrey, former US Senator; author of When I Was a Young Man
Whether you're a feminist, a conservative, a liberal, or a troglodyte, you'll find plenty of new ideas in this volume to stir you up—both for and against. Together, these essays argue convincingly that effective parenting must be supported by a substantial public investment.
— Heidi Hartmann, president and CEO, Institute for Women's Policy Research
Reading this book feels like having a rich conversation about raising children in today's world with a group of very impressive thinkers. While these thinkers bring diverse points of view about the problems facing parents today, they agree that parents are struggling—they have too many demands and not enough time or support. While these thinkers also have different views of the solutions, they likewise agree that parenting must be seen as a public rather than a private concern of society. These agreements should be a very powerful force in bringing about needed changes that will benefit children and families.
— Ellen Galinsky, President, Families and Work Institute, author of "Mind in the Making"
Hats off to Sylvia Hewlett, Nancy Rankin, and Cornel West for urging us to take parenting public. Parenting is highly revered in the U.S.—as long as it's done by women for free. It's high time parents got together to work for the supports they need.
— Ellen Bravo, co-director, 9 to 5, National Association of Working Women
An important and timely book that features thoughtful chapters by a diverse group of writers, including some of the most influential scholars and policy analysts in the nation. Rich substantive arguments and policy insights flow throughout the volume.
— William Julius Wilson, Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor, Harvard University
A vital volume that illuminates the daily crisis in American life–the chronic tension between work and family that confronts tens of millions of working parents. For all Americans, this book shows the high social costs of raising children with a workforce of dual career families or single parents in an outdated economic system that presumes a nation of stay-at-home moms. It presents a compelling case for fundamental changes in how we organize work to strike a better balance between job and home. It offers and agenda for reforming public policy and tells why all of us have a stake in reform.
— Hedrick Smith, executive producer, PBS “Juggling Work and Family”
This evidence-based book clarifies the causes and grievous consequences of the array of societal changes that have undermined parental authority and family functioning across all sectors of our population. The volume relies on scholarly commissioned papers along with results of focus groups and sophisticated survey data. A persuasive case is made for broad-based commitment to the implementation of sound social policy, both public and private, to address major concerns and needs of parents in the 21st Century. Doing so, will alleviate their personal pain as well as reducing the national losses of human potential and productivity for both parents and their children.
— Beatrix A. Hamburg, M.D., Cornell Weill Medical College
The wonderful thing about Taking Parenting Public is that it doesn't just analyze the challenges of parenting in the U.S. today—though it does that, in intelligent and compelling detail—but it actually suggests solutions. This is a must-read for anyone who wants to move beyond the current state.
— Deborah Holmes, Ernst & Young, National Director of the Center for the New Workforce
Outstanding documents that will contribute to the knowledge base of the human service field.
— The Insider
Highly readable and engaging. The case for a parents' movement is compellingly, cogently, and eloquently made in Taking Parenting Public. There is much to recommend this book.
— Journal of Marriage and Family