Question

"The Intersection of Poverty Discourses: Race, Class, Culture, and Gender", Debra Henderson and Ann Tickamyer
Henderson and Tickamyer focus on the stereotyped image of welfare as being synonymous with African Americans, and how that is not accurate. The work of Moynihan (1965) began linking welfare with poverty as a function of Black culture, broken families, and a "tangle of pathology", blaming the poverty issues on a lack of personal responsibility rather than systemic discrimination. Welfare reform has then been consistently tied to racial politics and remains a controversial issue. As a point of comparison, they turn the focus to rural welfare recipients in Appalachia, and find that due to their geographic isolation, women especially suffer from hardships due to the lack of resources that are more available in urban settings.
Proponents of welfare reform have historically blamed problems on
a. A lack of personal responsibility
b. Structural constraints
c. Institutionalized racism
d. Strong family values

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