Abstract

Subject to Debate

Pollitt, Katha | August 21, 2000 issue

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This article focuses on the Minnesota Family Investment Program (MFIP). By urging recipients into work, even low-wage work, while letting them keep part of their grant, MFIP seemed to validate the underlying ideology of welfare reform. After three years, poverty was down, marriage rates were up, kids were doing better in school and domestic violence and child abuse had both decreased. Conservatives liked the program because it emphasized work and family values, liberals liked it because it provided more money for families.

See Also:

PUBLIC welfare; FAMILIES; CHILD abuse; POVERTY; FAMILY violence; MINNESOTA; UNITED States
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