Urban Research Monitor
 
Welfare Reform

WELFARE THAT WORKS: LESSONS FROM THREE EXPERIMENTS THAT FIGHT DEPENDENCY AND POVERTY BY REWARDING WORK
Berlin, Gordon L. The American Prospect 11, 15 (2000): 68-73.

Success in the New Welfare Environment: An Assessment of Approaches in HUD's Employment and Training Initiatives
Boland, Kathleen A., and Abby Sosland. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research, 2000.

Finding Jobs: Work and Welfare Reform
Card, David, and Rebecca M. Blank, eds. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation, 2000.

Paths to Employment: The Role of Social Networks in the Job Search for Women on Welfare in San Francisco
Chapple, Karen Diane. Doctoral dissertation research grant (funded by HUD's Office of University Partnerships), 2000. H

Employer Demand for Welfare Recipients By Race Holzer, Harry J., and Michael A. Stoll. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation, 2000.

WITHOUT A NET: WHOM THE NEW WELFARE LAW HELPS AND HURTS
Jencks, Christopher, and Joseph Swingle. The American Prospect 11, 4 (January 2000): 37-41.

WELFARE TO WORK TRANSITION WITH PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS: APPLICATIONS OF THE TRANSTHEORETICAL MODEL
McGuire, Lisa Elizabeth. Doctoral dissertation research grant (funded by HUD's Office of University Partnerships), 2000. H

HOW WELFARE OFFICES UNDERMINE WELFARE REFORM
Meyers, Marcia K. The American Prospect 11, 15 (2000): 40-45.

Whose job is it? Employers' views on welfare reform
Owen, Greg, Ellen Shelton, Amy Bush Stevens, Justine Nelson-Christinedaughter, Corinna Roy, and June Heineman. Evanston, IL: Joint Center for Poverty Research, 2000.

Work and Economic Outcomes After Welfare
Vartanian, Thomas P., and Justine M. McNamara. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 27, 2 (June 2000): 41-77.


Publications marked with an H are available from HUD USER.


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