Listening to the Voices of Poor WomenISBN: 978-1-4051-0081-6
Paperback
242 pages
January 2002, Wiley-Blackwell
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Discusses a relatively invisible topic in psychology-that of poverty in the United States and its relation to social issues first person discussions of housing, the experience of receiving public assistance, being a poor parent in the public school system, and surviving as a poor woman in the workplace.
Full spectrum discussion of poverty, from general attitudes and media portrayals of the poor, to the individual voices of the poor, specifically women.
First person discussions of housing, the experience of receiving public assistance, being poor parent in the public school system, and surviving as a poor woman in the workplace.