What does Minnesota know?

Research on state welfare-to-work strategies adopted since the early 1990s, such as that in Minnesota, shows that the states that pursued a "mixed strategy" of work and training are the ones with the best records of promoting work and lifting families out of poverty. However, under ambitio...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American prospect 2002-07, p.A6
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description Research on state welfare-to-work strategies adopted since the early 1990s, such as that in Minnesota, shows that the states that pursued a "mixed strategy" of work and training are the ones with the best records of promoting work and lifting families out of poverty. However, under ambitious new work requirements proposed by the White House as part of its plan to reauthorize the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Act, states such as Minnesota would have to junk this patient, flexible strategy and replace it with something narrower and more mechanistic.
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subjects Child care
Education
Employment
Families & family life
Governors
Homeless people
Parents & parenting
Part time employment
Poverty
Public assistance programs
State government
Welfare
Workfare programs
Workweeks
title What does Minnesota know?
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