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Yacoubian, George S., Jr.; Peters, Ronald J., Jr.; Urbach, Blake J.; Johnson, Regina J. – Journal of Drug Education, 2002
Compares drug-positive rates between welfare-receiving arrestees, non-welfare receiving arrestees living below the poverty level, and non-welfare arrestees living above the poverty level. Welfare-receiving arrestees were more likely to be female, older, less educated, and to test positive for opiates and benzodiazepines than the other subgroups.…
Descriptors: Drug Use Testing, Illegal Drug Use, Prisoners, Welfare Recipients
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Rickman, Dana K.; Bross, Nancy; Foster, E. Michael – New Directions for Evaluation, 2001
Used administrative (for 20,237 adults) and survey data (from about 200 leavers per month) from Georgia to examine risk factors for recidivism among welfare leavers and the relationship between recidivism and leavers' ability to find sustained employment. Results show a threshold of earnings that welfare leavers need to survive at the poverty…
Descriptors: Adults, Employment, Income, Poverty
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Julnes, George; Hayashi, Kentaro; Anderson, Steven – New Directions for Evaluation, 2001
Used cluster analysis of survey data for 506 respondents to create a taxonomy of welfare leavers in Illinois based on their self-reported well-being after leaving welfare. Used classification tree analysis to identify factors associated with different types of leavers. Findings highlight the existence of many marginally successful leavers who…
Descriptors: Classification, Cluster Analysis, Income, Surveys
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Dunton, Nancy; Mosley, Jane; Butcher, Lola – New Directions for Evaluation, 2001
Used survey data (response rate of 75% for sample of 1,200), administrative data, and a database of the use of emergency assistance provided by community-based organizations to examine the economic status of former welfare recipients in Missouri and their use of government supports and community-based emergency assistance. (SLD)
Descriptors: Community Programs, Databases, Economic Factors, Low Income Groups
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Walden, Michael L. – Advancing the Consumer Interest, 1996
North Carolina attempted to reform its welfare system to remove disincentives to work and encourage intact families and savings. Issues raised were funding incentives dramatically increase short-term program spending; amount and kinds of jobs available for welfare recipients are uncertain; and limits on long-term support beg the question of what…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Incentives, State Aid, State Programs
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Long, Sharon K.; Wissoker, Douglas A. – Journal of Human Resources, 1995
Evaluation of Washington's Family Independence Program (1988-1993), designed to increase self-sufficiency of welfare recipients, shows that employment was lower and welfare participation higher than under Aid to Families with Dependent Children and there was little increase in education and training participation. The program apparently made…
Descriptors: Job Training, Program Evaluation, State Programs, Unemployment
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Klein, Hal; And Others – Journal of Employment Counseling, 1992
Examined the experience of unemployment and helping or hindering factors for social assistance recipients. Found total of 516 critical incidents identified from transcripts of taped interviews with 20 social assistance recipients. Majority of incidents were negative; most frequently occurring category was stress over lack of money. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Client Characteristics (Human Services), Foreign Countries, Unemployment
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Zimmerman, Shirley L. – Family Relations, 1991
Drawing on Durkheim's theory of social integration, an analysis of states' spending for public welfare and their divorce rates for 1960, 1970, 1980, and 1985 showed that the welfare state is not a destabilizing influence on family life as critics have charged. Past divorce rates were shown to have the most significant influence on current divorce…
Descriptors: Divorce, Economically Disadvantaged, Family Environment, Family Problems
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Berrick, Jill Duerr – Social Work, 1991
Notes that, although early approach to welfare encouraged women to remain at home and raise their children, emphasis is now on moving adult welfare recipients into labor market. Provides brief historical development of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), along with specific policy recommendations that address the child care needs of…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Employment, Federal Legislation
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O'Donnell, Sandra – Social Work, 1993
Describes how, through support of private philanthropy, welfare recipients have been involved in implementing welfare-to-work policy, including Job Opportunities in Business Sector provisions of Family Support Act, in Illinois since 1986. Describes client roles in problem formulation, model program development, policy development, and policy…
Descriptors: Client Characteristics (Human Services), Federal Legislation, Policy Formation, Responsibility
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Groskind, Fred – Social Work, 1994
Examined effects of certain ideological and attitudinal views of Americans on support for public assistance to poor families. Analysis of data from nationally representative sample of public opinion revealed several political and racial views that underlie support, or lack of support, for benefits to families in poverty. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Ideology, Poverty, Racial Attitudes
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Meyer, Daniel R.; Cancian, Maria – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1998
Uses data from National Longitudinal Survey of Youth to trace poverty status and welfare use in five years following an exit from Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). Results show substantial diversity in economic well-being. Women who were working when they exited from AFDC do better, and, to a lesser extent so do those who were…
Descriptors: Children, Economic Status, Females, Higher Education
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Gooden, Susan Tinsley; Bailey, Margo – Public Administration Review, 2001
Comparison of differences in job-retention outcomes for 1,777 welfare-to-work employees and 16,723 other employees in federal agencies reveals that welfare-to-work employees have greater odds of retaining their jobs. (Contains 32 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Federal Government, Government Employees, Labor Turnover
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Jones-Brown, Delores; Mahoney, Jacqueline – Social Justice: A Journal of Crime, Conflict & World Order, 2001
Though New York City's welfare reform act claims to emphasize personal responsibility, its design diminishes the possibility of sustained, meaningful employment or long-term economic stability for substantial numbers of Temporary Assistance for Needy Family recipients. By focusing on gaining employment, the act ignores well-established avenues to…
Descriptors: Employment, State Legislation, Urban Areas, Welfare Recipients
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Schmidt, Lucie; Sevak, Purvi – Journal of Human Resources, 2004
The effect of reforms of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) on caseloads of another program that is Supplemental Security Income (SSI) is examined. The results reveal that a decrease in caseloads in one program cannot be interpreted as an equal-sized decrease in the number of families receiving public assistance.
Descriptors: Welfare Services, Welfare Recipients, Caseworkers, Family (Sociological Unit)
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