Abstract

The Racialization Of Poverty

Wilkerson, Margaret B. | July 24, 1989 issue

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The article presents information on poverty in the U.S. The term "feminization of poverty" which was devised to describe the significant numbers of women and children living in poverty, is a distortion that negates the role played by racial barriers to black employment, particularly among males. The feminization of poverty is real, but the racialization of poverty is at its heart. Currently, the most critical problem relating to the plight of black unwed mothers is the massive unemployment of the males who would otherwise be potential mates for them.

See Also:

POVERTY; RACISM; POOR women; CHILDREN; WOMEN -- Social conditions; UNEMPLOYMENT; BLACKS; UNITED States
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