Skip to content

Social Change and the Empowerment of the Poor

Poverty Representation in Milwaukee's Community Action Programs, 1964-1972

Mark Edward Braun
Barcode 9780739101995
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £151.34 - Original price £151.34
Original price
£151.34
£151.34 - £151.34
Current price £151.34

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 21/03/2001

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: Lexington Books
Series: Studies in Modern American History
Language: English
Publisher: Lexington Books

Poverty Representation in Milwaukee's Community Action Programs, 1964-1972
This is a social history of seven anti-poverty "Community Action Programmes" (CAPs) in Milwaukee's inner city that were started in the 1960s. The book aims to dispel the notion that CAPs were a categorical failure and also to provide solutions to social problems in America's inner cities.
Social Change and the Empowerment of the Poor provides insight into the local impact of a variety of federal programs funded by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. Specifically, Mark Edward Braun's dramatic social history examines seven anti-poverty programs—Community Action Programs (CAPs)—started in Milwaukee in the 1960s. Braun's research confirms that, unlike most other cities, Milwaukee's deteriorating urban neighborhoods were transformed by these initiatives. CAPs successfully empowered Milwaukee's poor, made public officials and institutions more accountable to the needs of the poor, reformed punitive legislation, created new community-based organizations, expanded social services for people of color, and challenged elites. This book provides an excellent framework for future studies that will add to the current scholarly interest in the long-term results of CAPs. Braun simultaneously dispels the myth that CAPs were a categorical failure, and brings a provocative new voice to urban studies, social activism, policy studies and political science.