A Need for Change: A Reassessment of Welfare Reform

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"The debate is over. We now know that welfare reform works," declared President Clinton in the summer of 1997. The national consensus generally supported his assertion, and his major policy change: to halt the number of lax, uneventful aid recipients who are content with leeching indefinitely off the national welfare system. Under Clinton's 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, the former Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program was replaced by another, the Temporary …

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…Welfare." Vintage Books. New York, New York: 1993. Rector, Robert E. and Sarah E. Youssef. "The Determinants of Welfare Caseload Decline." Heritage Center for Data Analysis. Washington, D.C.: 1999. Soss, Joe. "Unwanted Claims: The Politics of Participation in the U.S. Welfare System" University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor, MI: 2000. Schram, Sanford F. and Joe Soss. "Success Stories: Welfare Reform, Policy Discourse, and the Politics of Research." The American Academy of Political and Social Science. September 2001.