ScholarWorks > HHS > Social Work > JSSW > Vol. 33 > Iss. 1 (2006)
Volume 33, Issue 1 (2006) March - Special Issue on Coping with Poverty
Complete Issue
Articles
The Earned Income Tax Credit: A Study of Eligible Participants vs. Non-participants
Richard K. Caputo
When Policy Meets Practice: The Untested Effects of Permanency Reforms in Child Welfare
Amy D'Andrade and Jill Duerr Berrick
Financial Knowledge of the Low-income Population: Effects of a Financial Education Program
Min Zhan, Steven G. Anderson, and Jeff Scott
The Social and Economic Impact of Sanctions and Time Limits on Recipients of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
Taryn Lindhorst and Ronald J. Mancoske
The Severely-Distressed African American Family in the Crack Era: Empowerment is not Enough
Eloise Dunlap, Andrew Golub, and Bruce D. Johnson
The Effect of Parental Work History and Public Assistance Use on the Transition to Adulthood
Stephanie Cosner Berzin, Allison C. De Marco, Terry V. Shaw, George J. Unick, and Sean R. Hogan
From "Poor" to "Not Poor": Improved Understandings and the Advantage of the Qualitative Approach
Eleanor Wint and Christine Frank
Citizen Participation in Neighborhood Organizations in Poor Communities and its Relationship to Neighborhood and Organizational Collective Efficacy
Mary Ohmer and Elizabeth Beck
Social Assistance and the Challenges of Poverty and Inequality in Azerbaijan, a low-income country in transition
Nazim N. Habibov and Lida Fan
Research Notes
The Sequential Costs of Poverty: What Traditional Measures Overlook
Elizabeth A. Segal and Laura R. Peck
Welfare to Web to Work: Internet Job Searching Among Former Welfare Clients in Florida
Steve McDonald and Robert E. Crew Jr.
Book Notes
Choice and Coercion: Birth Control, Sterilization and Abortion in Public Health and Welfare. Johanna Schoen.
Peggy Proudfoot McGuire
Book Reviews
Review of Double Jeopardy: Adolescent Offenders with Mental Disorders. Thomas Grisso. Reviewed by James W. Callicutt.
James W. Callicutt
Review of The Politics of Multiracialism: Challenging Racial Thinking. Heather M. Dalmage (Ed.). Reviewed by Wilma Peebles-Wilkins.
Wilma Peebles-Wilkins