Hayes Cry For Change In Term Paper

Between 10 and 31% of all mothers on welfare have physical disabilities that limit their ability to work or the kinds of employment they can take, as well as mental health conditions that make stable employment extremely difficult. The presence of preschool children in these women's lives are another impediment to free and full access to the world of employment, a reason that creates what Hays calls "feminization of poverty" inherent to modern American life. Hays stresses that the barriers to a successful transition from welfare to work are emotional and practical. Even women who wish to comply with the requirements of law have trouble finding decent childcare, care for their relatives, or transportation, and the law shows little compassion for their struggles, as they must meet often inflexible requirements. Frequently, it costs more to pay a child care providers than to support to mothers who wants to care for their children in her own home in a safer and better supervised fashion. But because the moral ethos of the law prioritizes work above all else, the law does not reflect the economic drain of childcare, or the fact that women might benefit from part-time education with long-term, rather than short-term training goals. Nor does it reflect the additional cost of subsidizing transportation to work for many of these women.

Hays provides statistical evidence that the welfare to work enforcement programs do not work, as only 1/3 of welfare recipients are find and keep jobs, most of these jobs offer little financial stability and self-sufficiency. The law, Hays states, wants two contradictory ends. On one hand, it wants these women to become employees, unfettered by family concerns, busily earning their daily bread and fending for themselves without a care or concern for others at home as they labor in the marketplace. On the other hand, the law and lawmakers...

...

The reasons for these women's difficulties are more complex. For example, the hard-working Shelia wanted to continue to work at the dry-cleaning establishment, but had to take care of her mother. Also, Shelia was raped by the child's father, which precludes marriage. Also, with minimum wage jobs, being unable to work due to illness, because of the illness of a child or the failure of childcare, as well as caring for a sick child or relative is not the concern of the employer. By not educating women to find higher forms of employment, they become easily replaceable workers, as the employer find another worker to fill the position without such personal problems quite easily. The more interchangeable and menial these unskilled jobs are, the less stable the work and the worker's paycheck will be every week.
Hays stresses that instating harsh welfare regulations with stringent moral guidelines are counterproductive. Ultimately, she believes that America as a nation, must find out how to support the long-term independence of these single mothers. Training in jobs with a future and slowly weaning them off of social support structures are key. Also, the nation must undergo a moral shift. In addition to the self-interested, competitive individualism of the American dream, there must also be a national acknowledgement of the need for some collective concern for the common good and the future of the nation's children who are the silent victims of so-called welfare reform.

Works Cited

Hays, Sharon. Flat Broke With Children: Women in the Age of Welfare Reform.

New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Hays, Sharon. Flat Broke With Children: Women in the Age of Welfare Reform.

New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.


Cite this Document:

"Hayes Cry For Change In" (2006, December 22) Retrieved April 24, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hayes-cry-for-change-in-40800

"Hayes Cry For Change In" 22 December 2006. Web.24 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hayes-cry-for-change-in-40800>

"Hayes Cry For Change In", 22 December 2006, Accessed.24 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/hayes-cry-for-change-in-40800

Related Documents

So who is an American and what an America can or cannot do are questions which are critical to the issue of legalizing immigrants. Does being an American mean you cannot show allegiance to any other country? The images of people raising and waving Mexican flag had enraged many but it need not have. It should be accepted that people who come from different countries would forever hold in their

Election of 1992
PAGES 4 WORDS 1441

presidential election of 1992 was a tight race, compared to others in history. The struggle between the Clinton camp, which focused on a platform involving the economy, the Bush camp, who focused on a platform whose basis was trust and taxes, and the Perot camp, who relied on a business-style economic platform, all combined to form one of the most interesting and changing races in recent years. This paper

This was true for example in the northern countries of Europe where Protestantism had firmly embedded itself an thrown off Church teaching. Wars were the result as the Holy Roman Empire attempted to put down the Protestant Rebellions -- but the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 finally and politically gave the Protestant countries in the north of Europe the right to exercise their new religions. Humanism, indeed, was spreading

Neonatal Sleep
PAGES 6 WORDS 1720

Neonatal Sleep Neonatal nurseries are the only alternative environment to a human womb that is offered to a preterm infant . The development of these nurseries and its accessories has now opened a new era in the management of these preterm infants .These nurseries by virtue of their sophisticated machines and experienced care givers are now offering a better chance of survival to these fragile infants .These preterm infants are now

Organisational Development Current Situation Organisational Development Plan Implementation of the Development Plan Stakeholder Engagement Evaluation of the Development Plan Organisational Development at RSPCA Of all Queensland's societies and organisations dedicated to the prevention of animal cruelty and bettering the lives of animals, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals (RSPCA Qld) is the oldest. The organisation needs approximately $42 million in funding every year to help build and maintain the various programs and services

Ape Speech Research Has Been
PAGES 18 WORDS 5500

Another theorist with a different view is Chomsky (1988). Chomsky sees the acquisition of language as a process of input-output, what he calls a Cartesian view of language acquisition and language structure. He states: "We have an organism of which we know nothing. We know, or we can discover, what kind of data is available to it, and the first question we must try to answer is: what kind of