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Greg Kaufmann | The Nation

Greg Kaufmann

Author Bios

Greg Kaufmann

Greg Kaufmann is a Nation contributor covering poverty in America, primarily through his blog, This Week in PovertyThrough his writing he seeks to increase media coverage of poverty, share new research, elevate the voices of people living in poverty and offer readers opportunities to get involved with organizations working to eradicate poverty. Bill Moyers & Company syndicates his blog and describes it as offering “must-read stories,” and Melissa Harris-Perry calls Greg “one of the most consistent voices on poverty in America.” Greg has spoken at numerous conferences and been a guest on MSNBC’s Melissa Harris-Perry, NPR’s Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane, Here & Now, Your Call, The Thom Hartmann Program and The Matthew Filipowicz Show, as well as various local radio programs. His work has also been featured on CBSNews.com, NPR.org, WashingtonPost.com, BillMoyers.com and BusinessInsider.com. He serves as an advisor for Barbara Ehrenreich’s Economic Hardship Reporting Project. He graduated from Dickinson College and studied creative writing at Miami University (Ohio). He lives in his hometown of Washington, DC, with his wife, son and two daughters.

Articles

News and Features

An already-bleak housing and homelessness situation is about to get a lot worse.

Students miss 50 million hours of school each year because of dental problems. A hearing Wednesday confronts the crisis.

In Appalachian Ohio, long lines at food pantries show just how wrongheaded a plan for economic recovery based on cutting assistance to the poor really is.

An interview with Georgetown University law professor Peter Edelman.

The Department of Defense's December review of Afghan strategy glossed over real challenges to the US involvement in the country's political and economic development.

The foreclosure crisis is now hitting even the safest borrowers. That makes passing the Right to Rent Act, which would enable homeowners who can't get loan modifications to stay in their homes, even more critical.

Three working homeowners in Queens faced foreclosure—and JP Morgan Chase refused to modify their mortgages. Now they've brought a lawsuit, and the bank is suddenly responsive.

David Cole on Dawn Johnsen, Greg Kaufmann on Stephen Friedman's windfall profits and Clarissa A. León on Islam Siddiqui, "pesticide pusher"

Offering banks incentives to prevent foreclosures isn't working. The Obama administration needs to start mandating mortgage modifications.

While the Obama Administration has taken steps to strengthen enforcement of humane handling and food safety laws, the verdict is still out on whether the USDA has the will to make the changes necessary for a safe and humane food system.

Blogs

Fresno adopts a policy of seizing and destroying homeless residents' property and a local legal services non-profit fights back.
The congressman’s moral rhetoric doesn't square with his cruel budget.
A new report on single mothers in the United States shatters some of the Gipper’s favorite myths that still persist today.
Just when you thought things couldn’t get any worse for poor people.
The food stamp program is up for reauthorization and three new studies indicate what needs to be done if we want to protect and strengthen...
Congress extended unemployment benefits, but it’s no good for those who’ve been jobless the longest.
If Obama wants his actions to match his rhetoric about helping the poor, he needs to show a lot more leadership.
Federal and state proposals to reduce unemployment benefits or make them harder to obtain place millions of unemployed people at risk of...