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Links
Poverty:
http://toopoortovoterepublican.com/
Expose the assault on the poor and the middle class!! Information about shifts in income, wealth, taxes, and services due to government policies. You can get "Too Poor To Vote Republican" bumper stickers.
http://www.prrac.org/
Poverty Race Research Action Council (PRRAC) is a non-partisan,
national, not-for-profit organization convened by major
civil rights, civil liberties and anti-poverty groups.
Their purpose is to link social science research to advocacy
work in order to address problems at the intersection of
race and poverty.
http://www.communitychange.org/
The Center for Community Change helps low-income people,
especially people of color, build powerful, effective organizations
through which they can change their communities and public
policies for the better.
http://www.cbpp.org/
The
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is one of the nation's
premier policy organizations working at the federal and
state levels on fiscal policy and public programs that
affect low- and moderate-income families and individuals. The
Center conducts research and analysis to inform public
debates over proposed budget and tax policies and to help
ensure that the needs of low-income families and individuals
are considered in these debates. They also develop
policy options to alleviate poverty, particularly among
working families.
http://www.results.org
RESULTS was formed to educate the public about issues
related to hunger and poverty, to educate and train individuals
and groups about powerful citizenship, to research current
hunger and poverty programs, and to discover cost-effective
solutions to the problems of hunger and poverty.
http://www.usccb.org/cchd/povertyusa/
Poverty
USA is sponsored by the Campaign for Human Development. CCHD
was established in 1970 to assist people to rise out of
poverty through empowerment programs. CCHD has provided
more than $260 million in support to nearly 4,000 self-help
projects developed by grassroots groups of poor people
in all 50 states. Check out their poverty quiz and
other educational resources at: http://www.usccb.org/cchd/povertyusa/povquiz.htm
http://www.poormagazine.org
Poor News Network is a multi-media access project of POOR Magazine, dedicated to reframing the news, issues and solutions from low and no income communities, as well as providing society with a perspective usually not heard or seen within the mainstream media. Published weekly, PNN offers “all the news that doesn’t fit.”
http://www.journalofpoverty.org/
Journal of Poverty: Innovations on Social, Political & Economic Inequalities
Working Class Experience:
http://www.steamiron.com/payday/
Payday is a website devoted to exploring working class art and life, from a working class perpective. The site includes bibliographies of working class autobiography and fiction and lists of poetry and anthologies of working class writing.
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/issr/csup/uploaded_files/Natl_DayLabor-On_the_Corner1.pdf
This report (issued by UCLA Social Sciences, Center for the Study of Urban Policy) details the day labor employment industry and the market interventions being employed by the worker center movement.
http://www.as.ysu.edu/~cwcs/wclinks.html
The Center for Work Class Studies at Youngstown State
University in Ohio has a terrific set of links to working
class issues and culture, including labor politics, working
class art, film archives, and museum resources.
http://naples.cc.sunysb.edu/CAS/wcm.nsf
The Center for Study of Working Class Life is dedicated to exploring the meaning
of class in today's world.
www.aflcio.org
The
AFL-CIO represents more than 13 million American workers
in 58 member unions working in virtually every part of
the economy. Their web sites include links to other
international unions and resources on worker rights and
issues.
http://www.labornotes.org/
Labor
Notes has been the voice of rank and file union activists
who want to "put the movement back in the
labor movement" since 1979.
http://www.bread-and-roses.com
Bread and Roses was founded in 1979 as a cultural resource for union members
and students in New York City works to strengthen the labor movement through
the use of music and the arts
http://www.laborheritage.org
works to strengthen the labor movement through the use of music and the arts
http://naples.cc.sunysb.edu/CAS/wcm.nsf/pages/wcsa
The Working-Class Studies Association aims to develop and promote multiple
forms of scholarship, teaching, and activism related to working-class life
and cultures.
BOOKS
Allison, Dorothy. Two or Three Things I Know .
Dutton, 1995. The author of Bastard Out of Carolina talks
about her experience growing up in poverty.
Allison, Dorothy. Skin: Talking about Sex, Class and
Literature . Ithaca, NY: Firebrand Books, 1994.
Dujon, Diane, and Withhorn , Ann. For Crying
Out Loud: Women's Poverty in the United States . Boston,
Mass.: South End Press, 1996
Kozol, Jonathan. Savage Inequalities: Children in
America's Schools . New York: Harperperennial, 1992. Kozol's
compelling narrative dramatizes the searing inequality
of opportunity that exists in America's schools.
Other Books About Poverty:
Davidson, Osha Gray. Broken Heartland: The
Rise of America's Rural Ghetto. Iowa City:
University of Iowa Press, 1996. An important look
at the experience of rural poverty and the growing exploitation
of rural workers in the new economy.
Moss, Kirby. The Color of Class: Poor Whites and the
Paradox of Privilege. University of Pensylvania
Press, 2003.
Payne, Ruby K. A Framework: Understanding and
Working with Students and Adults from Poverty . Cheryl
A. Evans, illustrator. Rev. ed. Baytown,
TX: RFT Pub., 1995.
Rank, Mark Robert. One Nation, Underprivileged: Why
American Poverty Affects Us All. Oxford
University Press, 2004. A powerful indictment
of persistent poverty and its real impact on people -and
costs to our society.
Shipler, David. The Working Poor: Invisible in America . New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2004. Top rate journalist
explores the experiences of America's working poor, letting
people tell their stories.
Wilson, William Julius. When Work Disappears: The
World of the New Urban Poor. New York: Vintage,
1996.
WORKING CLASS BOOKS
Narrative on the Working Class Experience:
Ehrenreich, Barbara. Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting
By in America . New York: Metropolitan Books,
Holt & Co, 2001. The best-selling book about
the invisible working class.
Lauter, Paul and Ann Fitzgerald. Literature, Class, and Culture . Addison Wesley, 2001.
Register, Cheri. Packinghouse Daughter: A Memoir . New
York: Perennial, HarperCollins, 2001. A memoir of
growing up in working-class Albert Lea, Minnesota, a meatpacking
town.
Tea, Michelle, editor. The Female Experience
of Growing Up Working Class , Seal Press, 2004.
Terkel, Studs. Working: People Talk about What They
Do All Day and How They Feel about What They Do .
New York: Pantheon Books, 1972. Great interviews
by the master interviewer himself with people about their
jobs.
Labor, Work and Working-Class Culture:
Albelda, Randy Pearl and Chris Tilly. Glass
Ceilings and Bottomless Pits: Women's Work, Women's Poverty . Boston:
South End Press, 1997.
Amott, Theresa and Matthaei, Julie. Race, Gender,
and Work: A Multicultural Economic History of Women in
the United States . Boston: South End Press,
1991.
Adler, William. Mollie's Job: A Story of Life and
Work on the Global Assembly Line . New York: Scribner,
2000.
Bronfenbrenner, Kate, Friedman, Sheldon, Hurd, Richard
W., Oswald, Rudolph A. and Seeber, Ronald L., eds. Organizing
To Win: New Research on Union Strategies . Ithaca,
New York: ILR Press/Cornell University Press, 1998.
Cavendish, Ruth. Women on the Line . Boston,
MA: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982.
De Santis, Solange. Life on the Line: One Woman's
Tale of Work, Sweat, and Survival . New York: Doubleday,
1999.
Freeman, Richard, ed. Working Under Different
Rules. New York: Russell Sage Foundation,
1994. Freeman shows that other countries have
rules much more favorable to workers than the U.S.
Geoghegan, Thomas . Which Side Are You On? Trying
to Be For Labor When It's Flat on Its Back . New
York, Penguin, Plum, 1991. First-person account
of working as a labor lawyer during the 1980s attacks
on organized labor.
Goad, Jim. The Redneck Manifesto, America's Scapegoats:
How we got that way and why we're not going to take it
anymore . New York: Simon and Schuster, 1999.
Moody.
Kim. Workers In a Lean World: Unions
in the International Economy. New York: Verso,
1997.
Murray. R. Emmett. The Lexicon of Labor. New
York: The New Press, 1998. Boost your labor movement
knowledge and history with this annotated glossary.
Pollin, Robert and Luce, Stephanie. The Living Wage:
Building a Fair Economy . New York: The New Press.
1998. The first full-length book that examines
the emerging "living wage" movement.
Queenan, Joe. Red
Lobster, White Trash, and the Blue Lagoon: Joe Queenan's
America. Hyperion, 1998.
Rubin, Lillian B.
Worlds of Pain: Life in the Working Class Family. New York:
Basic Books, 1976. One
the first searing contemporary insights into the hidden
injuries of class oppression.
Rubin, Lillian B. Families on the Fault Line: America's Working Class
Speaks about the Family, the Economy, Race, and Ethnicity. New York:
HarperCollins, 1994.
Sklar, Holly; Mykyta, Laryssa; and Wefald, Susan. Raise The Floor: Wages
and Policies That Work . New York: Ms. Foundation, 2001. A
compelling case for a living wage.
Tea, Michelle. Without A Net: The Female Experience
of Growing Up Working Class . Emeryville, CA:
Seal Press, 2003.
Zandy, Janet, editor. Liberating Memory: Our Work
and our Working Class Consciousness . New Brunswick,
NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995.
Zandy, Janet, editor. Calling Home: Working Class
Women's Writings: An Anthology . New Brunswick:
Rutgers University Press, 1990.
Zweig, Michael. The Working Class Majority: America's
Best Kept Secret . Cornell University Press, 2000. See
the reading
guide that accompanies this book.
STRADDLER EXPERIENCE
"Straddler" generally refers to the experience of people
who were raised in poverty or working class backgrounds,
but over their lifetimes move into the middle or owning
classes. They have the experience of "straddling" two
class identities.
Conley, Dalton. Honky . New York:
Vintage Books, 2000. Dalton Conley is a sociologist
who grew up in the projects on the Lower East Side of New
York, one of the few white kids in his neighborhood.
Lubrano, Alfred. Limbo: Blue-Collar Roots,
White-Collar Dreams . Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons,
2004. One of the most important books about the "Straddler" experience.
See
our Class Action summary
of this book.
Rose, Mike. Lives on the Boundary: The Struggles and
Achievements of America's Underprepared . Touchstone,
1999. The reflections of a "straddler" who grew
up in a low-income neighborhood in Los Angeles and is
now a writing teacher at UCLA.
Straddler: Race and Class:
Take the class "straddler" experience, and add a racial
dimension, and you get additional insights into the interaction
of race and class.
hooks, bell. Where We Stand: Class Matters . New
York: Routledge, 2000. hooks' insightful narrative
on the interaction of race and class and her own transition
to relative privilege and security.
Parker, Gwendolyn M. Trespassing: My Sojourn
in the Halls of Privilege . Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1997. Parker tells her story of growing up in
Durham, NC, descendent of the founder of the country's
premier black-owned insurance company -and her sojourn
to an elite private school and into the higher reaches
of corporate America.
Shop at Powells online bookstore for the above books or view our staff picks and more! When you shop through this link, you are supporting Class Action directly.
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