Preface Acknowledgments Race, Institutions, and Welfare in American Political Development Race, Class, and the Organization of Social Policy: The Social Security Act Old-Age Insurance: From Exclusion to Inclusion Aid to Dependent Children and the Political Construction of the "Underclass" Unemployment Insurance: Inclusion, Exclusion, and Stagnation Race, Welfare, and the Future of American Politics Appendix: Quantitative Study of ADC Notes Index
Shifting the Color Line is one of the best studies of race and social policy that I have read. Lieberman's analysis of the role of race in the development of America's peculiar welfare state and, in turn, the role of the welfare state in reshaping the politics of race is a tour de force. -- William Julius Wilson, Harvard University This is a splendid book. Lieberman writes with confidence and verve. He makes real analytic progress on such crucial topics as the development of the American welfare state, contemporary debates about welfare and--most important--the interplay between welfare policies and race politics...Lieberman deploys the institutional model with enormous sophistication. He shows how a thoughtful historical approach can deepen our understanding of both American politics and public policy. -- James A. Morone, Brown University Shifting the Color Line is a giant leap forward in the analysis of American social policy, and will be recognized as an authoritative landmark for years to come. It is well-researched, well-written, and conceptually original and powerful. It will also be sure to excite controversy. -- Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College
Robert C. Lieberman is Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs at Johns Hopkins University.
A true understanding of welfare, Robert C. Lieberman argues in his
provocative book, requires a hard look not at stereotypes but at
history. Built into the early architecture of social welfare
programs, are nasty political fights and rigged compromises over
race and class. To make his point, Lieberman plays bureaucratic
archeologist, unearthing and comparing the administrative
structures of three social welfare programs: Old-Age Insurance, Aid
to Dependent Children, and Unemployment Insurance… Shifting the
Color Line is an enlightening look at America’s failure to ask,
without racist or political motives, how poor people can make
progress… The book is an intense history course that bypasses
decades of deceptive rhetoric to get to the core issues of the
welfare debate.
*Boston Globe*
Robert Lieberman sets out to explain a ‘profound puzzle’ in the
complicated history of race and the American welfare state…
Lieberman combines historical and statistical analysis to show how
and why… Clearly this book addresses issues of central importance
to historians of race and social policy, and it does so with the
kind of tightly argued thesis that is sure to stimulate further
discussion and debate…he leaves us with important insights and
evidence to build on in understanding the crucial, institutional
dimensions of racial inequality.
*Reviews in American History*
This is a splendid book. Lieberman writes with confidence and
verve. He makes real analytic progress on such crucial topics as
the development of the American welfare state, contemporary debates
about welfare and—most important—the interplay between welfare
policies and race politics… Lieberman deploys the institutional
model with enormous sophistication. He shows how a thoughtful
historical approach can deepen our understanding of both American
politics and public policy.
*James A. Morone, Brown University*
Shifting the Color Line is a giant leap forward in the analysis of
American social policy, and will be recognized as an authoritative
landmark for years to come. It is well-researched, well-written,
and conceptually original and powerful. It will also be sure to
excite controversy.
*Rick Valelly, Swarthmore College*
Shifting the Color Line is one of the best studies of race and
social policy that I have read. Lieberman’s analysis of the role of
race in the development of America’s peculiar welfare state and, in
turn, the role of the welfare state in reshaping the politics of
race is a tour de force.
*William Julius Wilson, Harvard University*
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