The feminization of poverty is increasingly recognized as a global phenomenon, affecting women not only in third world countries but also in the West. Taking globalization as its starting point, Western Welfare in Decline explores the plight of poor single mothers in five English-speaking nations that have implemented welfare restructuring: the United States, Canada, Britain, Australia, and Aotearoa/New Zealand. This restructuring is analyzed in relation to the emergence of neoliberalism, which valorizes the free market, individualism, and a circumscribed role for the state.
Contributors toWestern Welfare in Declinecreatively combine theoretical and empirical analysis, emphasizing the economic and social goals of welfare reforms and the discourses of labor, gendered subjectivity, and the separation of public and private spheres. They document how the neoliberal project of welfare reform interacts with local cultures to create both similar and divergent new cultural formations and identify opportunities for asserting the social rights of poor single mothers who are being denied these rights at the level of the nation-state.
PART I: THE BIG PICTURE: GLOBALIZATION, NEOLIBERALISM, AND THE FEMINIZATION OF POVERTY
1 Introduction: The Global Feminization of Poverty
—Catherine Kingfisher
2 Neoliberalism I: Discourses of Personhood and Welfare Reform
—Catherine Kingfisher
3 Neoliberalism II: The Global Free Market
—Catherine Kingfisher
4 Globalization as Hybridity
—Catherine Kingfisher
PART II: ON THE GROUND: CASE STUDIES IN THE ARTICULATION OF (GENDERED) NEOLIBERALISM WITH (GENDERED) LOCAL CULTURE
5 From New Deal to Bad Deal: Racial and Political Implications of U.S. Welfare Reform
—Judith Goode
6 The Great Undoing: State Formation, Gender Politics, and Social Policy in Canada
—Janine Brodie
7 The Responsible Citizen: Creating a New British Welfare ContractlÃ