Women as Single Parents: Confronting Institutional Barriers in the Courts, the Workplace, and the Housing Market

Women as Single Parents: Confronting Institutional Barriers in the Courts, the Workplace, and the Housing Market

by Elizabth Mulroy (Editor)
Women as Single Parents: Confronting Institutional Barriers in the Courts, the Workplace, and the Housing Market

Women as Single Parents: Confronting Institutional Barriers in the Courts, the Workplace, and the Housing Market

by Elizabth Mulroy (Editor)

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Overview

As Michael Harrington's New American Poverty alerted readers to that problem, so the present collection makes readers aware of the various conditions of single parenting. . . . The institutional barriers of courts, housing, and workplace to the economic well-being of the female single parent are explicitly and directly examined. Solid recommendations for institutionalizing change on the state and federal levels are made. The interdisciplinary expertise of the authors covers the fields of law, social work, urban planning, housing, economics, and public policy, all with solid academic preparation. Charts are clear and concise, and the laguage is direct and concrete. Choice

The single-parent family phenomenon is primarily about households headed by single mothers with minor children. Some perceive this growing family form as a threat to the values of the traditional nuclear family and often stereotype the mothers and their children as problems all too often dependent on public assistance. Others cite an uncaring society that ignores the needs of its more vulnerable members. Stereotypes of single women as parents, however, often significantly misrepresent the reality. Indeed, the very ignoring of the great range of differences that characterize contemporary single mothers has itself led to a large and harmful body of myths that perpetuate and intensify the single parent's problems.

This sensitive, substantive book provides a needed examination of the realities of single parenthood for women. It makes a major contribution toward thoughtful formulation of policies for improving the economic and social well-being of single parents and their children. Scholars and practitioners in the fields of law, social work, urban planning, housing, economics, and public policy address and respond to the many problems, challenges, and barriers that single mothers confront in the courts, in labor markets, and in housing.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780865691766
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/30/1988
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1480L (what's this?)

About the Author

ELIZABETH A. MULROY, a social worker and urban planner, teaches social policy, planning, and management at Boston University School of Social Work, where she is also Director of the Human Services Management Program.

Table of Contents

Background
Introduction by Elizabeth A. Mulroy
Who Are Single-Parent Families and Where Do They Live? by Elizabeth A. Mulroy
Experiencing Single Parenthood
Gender Bias in the Courts by Lynn Hecht Schafran
Restructuring Family Life by Frances Smalls Caple
Working for Less: Single Mothers in the Workplace by Teresa Amott
The Search for Affordable Housing by Elizabeth A. Mulroy
A Call for Federal and State Action
The Role of the Courts in Welfare Reform by Barbara Sard
Federal Policy-making and Family Issues by Anne L. Radigan
Single-Parent Families and a Right to Housing by Frank I. Smizik and Michael E. Stone
Social Reform: Expanding Choices and Increasing Institutional Responsiveness by Elizabeth A. Mulroy
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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