Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
CHAPTER 7: Poverty and Family Composition since 1940
-
Mark J. Stern
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- INTRODUCTION: The Urban "Underclass" as a Metaphor of Social Transformation 1
-
PART ONE: The Roots of Ghetto Poverty
- CHAPTER 1: Southern Diaspora: Origins of the Northern "Underclass" 27
- CHAPTER 2: Blacks in the Urban North: The "Underclass Question" in Historical Perspective 55
-
PART TWO: The Transformation of America's Cities
- CHAPTER 3: The Structures of Urban Poverty: The Reorganization of Space and Work in Three Periods of American History 85
- CHAPTER 4: Housing the "Underclass" 118
-
PART THREE: Families, Networks, and Opportunities
- CHAPTER 5: The Ethnic Niche and the Structure of Opportunity: Immigrants and Minorities in New York City 161
- CHAPTER 6: The Emergence of "Underclass" Family Patterns, 1900-1940 194
- CHAPTER 7: Poverty and Family Composition since 1940 220
- CHAPTER 8: Social Science, Social Policy, and the Heritage of African-American Families 254
-
PART FOUR: Politics, Institutions, and the State
- CHAPTER 9: The Black Poor and the Politics of Opposition in a New South City, 1929-1970 293
- CHAPTER 10: Nineteenth-Century Institutions: Dealing with the Urban "Underclass" 334
- CHAPTER 11: Urban Education and the "Truly Disadvantaged": The Historical Roots of the Contemporary Crisis, 1945-1990 366
- CHAPTER 12: The State, the Movement, and the Urban Poor: The War on Poverty and Political Mobilization in the 19605 403
- CONCLUSION: Reframing the "Underclass" Debate 440
- Contributors 479
- Name Index 483
- Subject Index 499
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- INTRODUCTION: The Urban "Underclass" as a Metaphor of Social Transformation 1
-
PART ONE: The Roots of Ghetto Poverty
- CHAPTER 1: Southern Diaspora: Origins of the Northern "Underclass" 27
- CHAPTER 2: Blacks in the Urban North: The "Underclass Question" in Historical Perspective 55
-
PART TWO: The Transformation of America's Cities
- CHAPTER 3: The Structures of Urban Poverty: The Reorganization of Space and Work in Three Periods of American History 85
- CHAPTER 4: Housing the "Underclass" 118
-
PART THREE: Families, Networks, and Opportunities
- CHAPTER 5: The Ethnic Niche and the Structure of Opportunity: Immigrants and Minorities in New York City 161
- CHAPTER 6: The Emergence of "Underclass" Family Patterns, 1900-1940 194
- CHAPTER 7: Poverty and Family Composition since 1940 220
- CHAPTER 8: Social Science, Social Policy, and the Heritage of African-American Families 254
-
PART FOUR: Politics, Institutions, and the State
- CHAPTER 9: The Black Poor and the Politics of Opposition in a New South City, 1929-1970 293
- CHAPTER 10: Nineteenth-Century Institutions: Dealing with the Urban "Underclass" 334
- CHAPTER 11: Urban Education and the "Truly Disadvantaged": The Historical Roots of the Contemporary Crisis, 1945-1990 366
- CHAPTER 12: The State, the Movement, and the Urban Poor: The War on Poverty and Political Mobilization in the 19605 403
- CONCLUSION: Reframing the "Underclass" Debate 440
- Contributors 479
- Name Index 483
- Subject Index 499