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30 J. Soc. & Soc. Welfare 3 (2003)
American Poverty as a Structural Failing: Evidence and Arguments

handle is hein.journals/jrlsasw30 and id is 591 raw text is: American Poverty as a Structural Failing:
Evidence and Arguments
MARK R. RANK
Washington University
George Warren Brown School of Social Work
HONG-SIK YOON
Chonbuk National University
Department of Social Welfare
THOMAS A. HIRSCHL
Cornell University
Department of Rural Sociology
Empirical research on American poverty has largely focused on individual
characteristics to explain the occurrence and patterns of poverty. The argu-
ment in this article is that such an emphasis is misplaced. By focusing upon
individual attributes as the cause of poverty, social scientists have largely
missed the underlying dynamic of American impoverishment. Poverty
researchers have in effect focused on who loses out at the economic game,
rather than addressing the fact that the game produces losers in the first
place. We provide three lines of evidence to suggest that U.S. poverty
is ultimately the result of structural failings at the economic, political,
and social levels. These include an analysis into the lack of sufficient
jobs in the economy to raise families out of poverty or near poverty; a
comparative examination into the high rates of U.S. poverty as a result of
the ineffectiveness of the social safety net; and the systemic nature of poverty
as indicated by the life course risk of impoverishment experienced by a ma-
jority of Americans. We then briefly outline a framework for reinterpreting
American poverty. This perspective incorporates the prior research findings
that have focused on individual characteristics as important factors in who
loses out at the economic game, with the structural nature of American
poverty that ensures the existence of economic losers in the first place.
Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, December, 2003, Volume XXX, Number 4

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