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Can Working Families Ever Win?

A New Democracy Forum on Helping Parents Succeed at Work and Caregiving

Jody Heyman Joshua Cohen

$32.99

Paperback

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English
Beacon Press
01 September 2018
Jody Heymann takes on the American belief that creating a better life for your children is simply a matter of working hard. She argues that poor parents don't have a fair chance. Because our nation fails to provide essential supports, it is virtually impossible for these individuals to succeed at work while caring well for their children. Because of the twin demands of work and family that poor parents face, the health and education of their children suffer. These kids often lack adequate preschool childcare or school-age care, which reduces their own potential to succeed.

Heymann shows how intergenerational poverty is perpetuated by outdated labor policies and suggests what must be done to help families. A wide range of thinkers respond.

The New Democracy Forum is a series of short paperback originals exploring creative solutions to our most urgent national concerns.

""A civic treasure. . . . A truly good idea, carried out with intelligence and panache."" --Robert Pinsky
By:  
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Volume:   15
Dimensions:   Height: 202mm,  Width: 135mm,  Spine: 10mm
Weight:   204g
ISBN:   9780807004531
ISBN 10:   0807004537
Series:   New Democracy Forum
Pages:   152
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

A frequent media commentator on issues of family and work, Jody Heymann, M.D., Ph.D., is founder and director of the Project on Global Working Families at Harvard University and author of The Widening Gap. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Reviews for Can Working Families Ever Win?: A New Democracy Forum on Helping Parents Succeed at Work and Caregiving

An abandoned kitten serves as balm, comic relief and social director to a hard-pressed Midwestern town.The feline came in through the book drop on a bone-crackingly cold winter's night. The place was the public library of Spencer, Iowa, where the corn grows nine feet high and the earth is so fertile you would swear the ground is about to push up and tip the sky right out of the picture. But this was in the 1980s, when the farm crisis was in full tilt; lenders had foreclosed on 50 percent of the family farms in northwest Iowa by the end of the decade. Local librarian Myron paints a town in crisis: economically, socially and in terms of the human spirit. She was in crisis too and neatly tucks her own recovery into the larger story of the town's gradual rejuvenation. Named Dewey (after the decimal system), the kitten became the library mascot and a synecdoche: He never lost his trust, no matter what the circumstances, or his appreciation for life He was confident. Myron doesn't overplay this metaphor, but works it subtly as she depicts the town's fortunes reviving and shows Dewey playing his role in that revival with composure, social skills, patience and a measure of mischief. In an easeful voice and with an eye for detail, she delineates Spencer: its economic swings, the lay of the land, the Prairie Deco downtown. Dewey is the pivot; he even became a bit of a national celebrity, and the New York Times ran his obit. He was, this loving account demonstrates, the right cat in the right place for Spencer and most certainly for its librarian.Intimate portrait of a place snugly set within its historical moment, preserved in Myron's understated, well-polished prose. (Kirkus Reviews)


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