Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 304
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-2667-9 • Hardback • October 2003 • $139.00 • (£107.00)
978-0-7425-2668-6 • Paperback • October 2003 • $113.00 • (£87.00)
Brendon O'Connor is assistant professor in the School of Politics and Public Policy, Griffith University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 I The Liberal Welfare System
Chapter 3 Liberalism and Welfare: The Ideological and Political Roots of the American Welfare System
Chapter 4 The Liberal Consensus and the Great Society
Chapter 5 The Seeds of Doom for Liberalism
Part 6 II The Conservative Attack on Welfare Liberalism
Chapter 7 The Neoconservatives
Chapter 8 Reagan's Conservatives: The Supply-Siders, George Gilder, and Charles Murray
Chapter 9 The New Right
Chapter 10 A Populist Backlash?
Part 11 III The Emergence of a Conservative Welfare System
Chapter 12 Bill Clinton's Third Way Welfare Politics: Innovation, Compromise, and Capitulation
Chapter 13 Newt Gingrich, the Contract with Americaand Justifying the PRWORA
Chapter 14 Conservative Welfare Policy in Practice
O'Connor's timely volume is a vital reminder to scholars of American politics and government that ideas do indeed matter! He demonstrates how both liberals and conservatives in America have wrestled with the problem of accommodating the need to aid the disadvantaged with America's individualistic political culture. Moroever, his analysis of the politics behind the 1996 welfare reform, based on interviews with many of the key participants, is brilliant. A Political History of the American Welfare System has set the standard of scholarship on the politics of welfare reform.
— Nicol Rae, Florida International University
Ideas have consequences. The ideas that emerged in the sixties had more radical consequences than could have been anticipated, as the world came to be turned right-side-up. In this book, Brendon O'Connor's achievement is to track and explain this process and its practical results. An important book.
— Peter Beilharz, Curtin University
Brendon O'Connor's book provides a refreshingly balanced and sober assessment of the vexed issues around U.S. welfare policies, based on extensive research. For foreigners, the passions aroused by the debate on welfare in the U.S. is often hard to fathom, and O'Connor clarifies and illuminates the ways in which these debates often touch on competing visions of the nature of American society and of human nature itself.
— Dennis Altman, president, AIDS Society of Asia and the Pacific
O'Connor provides a complex, nuanced, and important analysis of a major policy transformation that mandated work requirements for poor women to receive income supports. Moreover, he analyzes U.S. conservative ideologies that have had and will continue to make major impacts on many public policies other than welfare during the Bush administration.
— Bruce Johnson, director, Institute for Special Populations Research