Cheating Welfare

Public Assistance and the Criminalization of Poverty

Hardcover, 227 pages

English language

Published March 11, 2011 by New York University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8147-3231-1
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OCLC Number:
692291850

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Over the last three decades, welfare policies have been informed by popular beliefs that welfare fraud is rampant. As a result, welfare policies have become more punitive and the boundaries between the welfare system and the criminal justice system have blurred--so much so that in some locales prosecution caseloads for welfare fraud exceed welfare caseloads. In reality, some recipients manipulate the welfare system for their own ends, others are gravely hurt by punitive policies, and still others fall somewhere in between.

In Cheating Welfare, Kaaryn S. Gustafson endeavors to clear up these gray areas by providing insights into the history, social construction, and lived experience of welfare. She shows why cheating is all but inevitable--not because poor people are immoral, but because ordinary individuals navigating complex systems of rules are likely to become entangled despite their best efforts. Through an examination of the construction of the crime we know as …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Welfare fraud
  • Public welfare
  • Case studies

Places

  • United States
  • California