A "welfare queen" is a derogatory term used in the United States to describe individuals who are perceived to misuse or abuse the welfare system, often through fraudulent means, child endangerment, or manipulation. The media's coverage of welfare fraud began in the early 1960s and was featured in general-interest publications such as Reader's Digest. The term gained widespread recognition following media reporting in 1974 regarding the case of Linda Taylor. It was further popularized by Ronald Reagan during Reagan's 1976 presidential campaign when he frequently embellished Taylor's story in his speeches.[1][2]
Since its inception, the phrase "welfare queen" has remained a stigmatizing label and has at times been disproportionately associated with black, single mothers. This stereotype implies that these women intentionally have multiple children to maximize their welfare benefits, avoid seeking employment, and live extravagantly at the expense of taxpayers. As a result, it has been widely criticized as racist by many observers and overlooks the fact that many White, Latino, Asian, and Arab Americans are welfare recipients.[3][4]
Although women in the U.S. could no longer stay on welfare indefinitely after the federal government launched the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program in 1996,[5] the term remains a trope in the American dialogue on poverty and negatively shapes welfare policies and outcomes for these families.[1][4][6][7][8]
Origin
editThe idea of welfare fraud goes back to the early-1960s, when the majority of known offenders were male.[9] Despite this, many journalistic exposés were published at the time on those who would come to be known as welfare queens. Reader's Digest and Look magazine published sensational stories about mothers gaming the system.[9] The idea of welfare fraud goes back to the early-1960s, the emergence of the "Welfare queen" stereotype occurred during a period of significant social change in the United States. The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s challenged racial segregation and discrimination, leading to legal and societal changes aimed at promoting racial equality.[10]
The term was coined in 1974, either by George Bliss of the Chicago Tribune in his articles about Linda Taylor, or by Jet magazine.[11] Neither publication credits the other in their "Welfare Queen" stories of that year. Taylor was ultimately charged with committing $8,000 in fraud (equivalent to $49,425 in 2023) and having four aliases.[12] She was convicted in 1977 of illegally obtaining 23 welfare checks using two aliases and was sentenced to two to six years in prison.[13][14] During the same decade, Taylor was investigated for alleged kidnapping and baby trafficking, and is suspected of multiple murders, but was never charged.[15]
Accounts of her activities were used by Ronald Reagan, beginning with his 1976 presidential campaign, although he never identified her by name or race.[1][16][17]
She has 80 names, 30 addresses, 12 Social Security cards and is collecting veterans' benefits on four non-existing deceased husbands. And she's collecting Social Security on her cards. She's got Medicaid, getting food stamps, and she is collecting welfare under each of her names. Her tax-free cash income alone is over $150,000.
— Ronald Reagan, Jan 1976, Asheville N.C Campaign Trail Speech, "'Welfare Queen' Becomes Issue in Reagan Campaign" New York Times, Feb 15, 1976
Used to illustrate his criticisms of social programs in the United States,[18] Reagan employed the trope of the "Welfare Queen" in order to rally support for reform of the welfare system. During his initial bid for the Republican nomination in 1976, and again in 1980, Reagan constantly made reference to the "Welfare Queen" at his campaign rallies.[6] Some of these stories, and some that followed into the 1990s, focused on female welfare recipients engaged in behavior counter-productive to eventual financial independence such as having children out of wedlock, using AFDC money to buy drugs, or showing little desire to work.[19] Reagan's characterization of these individuals were used to justify real-life changes to policies and play a role in the shrinking of the social safety net.[20] These women were understood to be overwhelmingly women of color in an effort to push racialized narratives.[8] They were also understood to be social parasites, while engaging in self damaging behavior while draining society of valuable resources.[9] Stories about able-bodied men collecting welfare continued to dominate discourse until the 1970s, at which point women became the main focus of welfare fraud stories (despite these early appearances of the "Welfare Queen" icon).[9]
In political discourse
editPrior to former President Ronald Reagan's campaign, in the 1960s, the Moynihan Report was created. This report addressed the ways that black people experienced poverty and tried to cite a cause of the inequality in income this group faced. Moynihan's central argument of the report was that the "breakdown" of the black family was the cause of poverty among African-Americans. This argument had two key points, which were black children growing up without a father, and in matriarchal systems, was damaging which contributes to deviancy in children.[21] The report changed the thought process surrounding welfare, specifically concerning welfare laws and policy and the "solution" to poverty. Politicians began to place blame on gender and cultural differences between black and white people rather than welfare laws. While feminists and other activists fought against the ideas birthed from this report, the belief of a fractured black family began to take hold and influence policy.[22]
The term "welfare queen" became a catchphrase during political dialogue of the 1980s and 1990s. The term came under criticism for its supposed use as a political tool and for its derogatory connotations. Criticism focused on the fact that individuals committing welfare fraud were, in reality, a very small percentage of those legitimately receiving welfare.[9] Use of the term was also seen as an attempt to stereotype recipients in order to undermine public support for AFDC.[4]
The welfare queen idea became an integral part of a larger discourse on welfare reform, especially during the bipartisan effort to reform the welfare system under Bill Clinton.[3] Anti-welfare advocates ended AFDC in 1996 and overhauled the system with the introduction of TANF with the belief that welfare discouraged self-reliance.[20] Despite the new system's time-limits, the welfare queen legacy has endured and continues to shape public perception and policy.[1][4] The current TANF policies restrict welfare support in ways that appear to align with and may be the result of the fears and concerns centered around the welfare queen trope.[23] For example, welfare payments are intended for temporary support (a maximum of five years) and restrict welfare support through work requirements and family caps to avoid the fear of "welfare queens" and other "undeserving" recipients from taking advantage of welfare benefits or from an overly generous welfare system encouraging financial and moral irresponsibility.[23][24]
Despite the fact that the majority of welfare recipients are white, welfare attitudes are primarily shaped by public perceptions of black people on welfare, which perpetuates racial tropes such as the "welfare queen" and blocks access to resources that are needed by these families.[7][25]
During Governor Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign, he alluded to the "welfare queen" stereotype again when he attacked President Barack Obama by spreading television advertisements vilifying President Obama's leniency on the "undeserving" poor through reducing the rigor of TANF requirements to primarily appeal to a white, middle class demographic who believe in cutting government spending on welfare programs to force people in poverty out of perceived laziness and into self-reliance.[26]
Do you support work for welfare? Barack Obama has a long history of opposing work for welfare... On July 12th, Obama quietly ended work requirements for welfare. You wouldn't have to work and wouldn't have to train for a job. Mitt Romney strongly believes that work must be part of welfare. The Romney plan for a stronger middle class. It will put work back in welfare.
— Governor Mitt Romney, 'Long History', Presidential Campaign Television Ad, August 13, 2012
Gender and racial stereotypes
editPolitical scientist Franklin Gilliam has argued that the welfare queen stereotype has roots in both race and gender:
While poor women of all races get blamed for their impoverished condition, African-American women commit the most egregious violations of American values. This story line taps into stereotypes about both women (uncontrolled sexuality) and African-Americans (laziness).[4]
The trope of the welfare queen may be analyzed from the framework of intersectionality to better understand how race, class, gender, and other identities shape individuals' and groups' privileges and disadvantages.[27][28]
The media's image of poverty shifted from focusing on the plight of white Appalachian farmers and on the factory closings in the 1960s to a more racially divisive and negative image of poor blacks in urban areas. All of this, according to political scientist Martin Gilens, led to the American public dramatically overestimating the percentage of African-Americans in poverty.[29] By 1973, in magazine pictures depicting welfare recipients, 75% featured African Americans when in fact African Americans made up 35% of welfare recipients and only 12.8% of the US population.[29] According to the United States Census, "In 2019, the share of blacks in poverty was 1.8 times greater than their share among the general population. Blacks represented 13.2% of the total population in the United States, but 23.8% of the poverty population."[30] Van Doorn states that the media repeatedly shows a relationship between lazy, black, and poor suggesting why some Americans are opposed to welfare programs.[31][32]
From the 1970s onward, women became the predominant face of poverty.[4][9] In a 1999 study by Franklin Gilliam that examined people's attitudes on race, gender, and the media, an eleven-minute news clip featuring one of two stories on welfare was shown to two groups of participants. Each story on welfare had a different recipient—one was a white woman and the other was a black woman. The results showed that people were extremely accurate in their recall of the race and gender of the black female welfare recipient in comparison to those who saw the story with the white female welfare recipient. This outcome confirmed that this unbalanced narrative of gender and race had become a standard cultural bias and that Americans often made implicit associations between race, gender, and poverty.[4]
Furthermore, research conducted by Jennifer L. Monahan, Irene Shtrulis, and Sonja Givens on the transference of media images into interpersonal contexts reveal similar results. The researchers found that "Specific stereotype portrayals of African American women were hypothesized to produce stereotype-consistent judgments made of a different African American woman"[33]
Additionally, some believe that black single women on welfare are irresponsible in their reproductive decisions and may continue to have children to reap welfare benefits.[34] However, as analyzed from the United States General Accounting office data, there is no greater likelihood of these occurrences with women on welfare.[34]
The "welfare queen" stereotype is driven by false and racist beliefs that place the blame of the circumstances of poor black single mothers as the result of their own individual issues while bringing forward racial tropes such as their promiscuity, lack of structure and morals, and avoidance of work.[7] With primary narratives regarding poverty being driven by the myth of the meritocracy (the ideologies that are centered in self-reliance and hard work being enough to pull oneself out of poverty), the "welfare queen" trope illustrates the result of adding racial and gender dimensions to these inaccurate claims.[7] This became a public identity mapped onto black women's bodies and the perpetuation of this public identity has been used to inform welfare policy outcomes.[8] In addition to work ethic, family values, such as a heteronormative, working, two-parent household and having children only when married, are seen as the cultural standard. As a result, deviations from this ideal constitute a lower social value.[35] By stereotyping single black mothers as "welfare queens," the interpersonal, structural, and institutional barriers that prevent adequate resources and opportunities for them which lead to or reinforce poverty are not addressed. The lack of accountability seen by institutions and structures within our government promotes individualistic and neoliberal ideals that put societal failures onto the individual rather than analyzing institutional barriers that might be preventing any necessary changes within the U.S. welfare system.[36]
Impact of the stereotype
editThe "Welfare queen" stereotype has had profound and far-reaching consequences, particularly during the 1990s and beyond. In the 1990s, partly due to widespread belief in the "welfare queen" stereotype, twenty-two American states passed laws that banned increasing welfare payments to mothers after they had more children.[37] In order to receive additional funds after the birth of a child, women were required to prove to the state that their pregnancies were the result of contraceptive failure, rape, or incest.[37] Between 2002 and 2016, these laws were repealed in seven states.[37] California State Senator Holly Mitchell said at the time of the repeal of California's law, "I don't know a woman—and I don't think she exists—who would have a baby for the sole purpose of having another $130 a month."[37]
The impact of the "Welfare queen" stereotype extended to welfare policies, affecting poor single mothers. These policies often failed to provide adequate access to contraceptives or abortions, limiting welfare benefits for women with children through family caps. This restricted women's reproductive autonomy and perpetuated the cycle of poverty. The stereotype's underlying belief that having children outside of marriage leads to reliance on welfare further marginalized black single mothers.
Champlin argues that the current welfare system punishes poor single mothers by not providing adequate access to contraceptives or abortions, if a woman does not wish to get pregnant, or having family caps that limit welfare benefits for women with children.[38] It seems that regardless of whether a woman chooses to have children or not, her capabilities in achieving those desires are severely restricted by the policies and attitudes of the welfare system, which places the blame of poverty on the women and reinforces the cycle of poverty.[38] Welfare benefits have been used as a tool for reproductive oppression and prevent their autonomy over their bodies.[38] The reproductive oppression is partially rooted in the beliefs that having children outside of a marriage results the reliance on welfare and additional children that will continue the culture of poverty. These limitations in black single mothers' reproductive rights as requirements for welfare follows a theme of the social control of the poor, specifically where the reproduction of "fit" or "unfit" groups are controlled by those in power who deem minoritized groups, who do not follow a white, heteronormative ideal, as substandard and less fit to have reproductive autonomy.[39]
This racial trope fostered resentment against black families, portraying single-parent or non-normative households as unfairly exploiting the welfare system. As a result, policies provided inadequate resources to these families, trapping them in poverty and stigmatizing them. This reduction in the welfare safety net ran contrary to the intended goal of supporting the well-being of mothers and children.[7] Consequently, these families are stuck in a state of poverty and are further stigmatized.[7] The reduction of their welfare safety net is rooted in the racially-based vilification of the mothers and further harms the children of these families as a result, despite the original intentions of welfare policies being to assist the children.[7]
As stated by the United States Department of Health and Human Services website, the goals of TANF (Temporary Assistance to Needy Families) program include reducing "out-of wedlock pregnancies" and encouraging "two-parent families" and self-reliance.[40] The stereotype of the welfare queen appears to run counter to these ideals: the portrayal of a single, unemployed woman with a lack of procreative and financial responsibility and an overreliance on government benefits.[23] As a result, some authors argue that current welfare policies are shaped by the desire to punish these "undeserving" recipients, rather than welfare's goal of supporting the wellbeing of mothers and their children.[7][23] Additionally, the trope of the welfare queen also shaped other policies such as the Personal Responsibility and Work Act of 1996 by enforcing patriarchal, heteronormative ideals as the moral gold standard for tackling poverty and the "culture" of poverty and by situating black single mothers as "deviants" from the ideal mothering figure.[41][34]
The stereotype of the welfare queen, along with other black tropes such as the "Jezebel", "Mammies, and "matriarchs," are reflected in the attitudes of welfare care workers, positioning of welfare clients, and the talks between them.[34] Overall, these tropes result in negative interactions between the welfare recipients and the caseworkers. For example, some caseworkers viewed the mothers as sexually irresponsible, negligent, or entitled, leading some to talk to mothers attempting to seek welfare in a degrading or patronizing way.[34]
Some scholars argue against the welfare requirement of having single mothers work by posing the question of why there is a greater focus on ensuring that single mothers contribute to the workforce rather than them having the time and resources to support and care for their children.[42] Roberts and others point to one of the reasons being the devaluation of maternal work, particularly surrounding black single mothers.[42] They explain that, due to society's perception of black single mothers as "unfit" for mothering or as deviations from the ideal maternal figure in a two-parent, heteronormative family structure, the importance of black mothering is often neglected and undervalued, resulting in separating black mothers from their children in requiring them to participate in the workforce.[42] This reflects similar themes from slavery, where enslaved mothers were often forced to be apart from their children in order to serve their enslavers' labor needs.[42] Additionally, in requiring mothers to work, discussions about their children and their wellbeing are lost from the focus of these conversations.[42] Instead, they are positioned as not a priority, as compared to the productivity required from their mothers, and their wellbeing is at the expense of these work requirements for their caregivers.[42] Roberts argues that this implies that society does not place value in the children of mothers on welfare and the potential for their growth and development.[42] Rather, these children are seen as already lost in what society deems valuable. They are not viewed as being worthwhile to be invested in and that they will likely to grow up and perpetuate the same moral "deviance" and culture of poverty as their mothers.[42]
Movements for welfare reform and destigmatization
editIn the 1960s, black- and female-led movements for adequate welfare benefits and a resistance against negative stereotypes started to be seen throughout the United States in local and community contexts.[36] By organizing political demonstrations, creating welfare resource guides, advocating against restrictive welfare requirements (such as a disqualification for welfare benefits if there was an adult male figure in the household), and challenging the idea of a heteronormative, two-parent family structure being the gold standard for a functional and self-reliant household, these women (who referred to themselves as mothers to highlight the value of their labor at home) aimed to provide greater autonomy and reduce stigmatization for mother welfare-recipients.[36] They also argued against the control of female reproduction through welfare, that all women should have the choice whether or not to use birth control and that welfare support should not be contingent on how "deserving" the mothers were based on their choices.[36]
Because the welfare queen stereotype is often perpetuated through stories, research into narrative structure and transmission has offered some strategies for challenging false claims about who receives welfare and why.[1] Social media has also emerged as a popular space for sharing welfare legends and memes, the vast majority of which depict welfare and its recipients in a negative light, relying on the welfare queen as a default stereotype.[1][43][44] Theories from sociology, psychology, communications, and folklore studies highlight how efforts to refute these stereotypes can do the opposite by introducing false information to readers even when countering it.[45][46][47] However, using moral reframing theory,[48] active perspective taking,[49][50] anti-legends,[1][51] and counternarratives,[52] these risks can be mitigated, and more accurate depictions of poverty and welfare can replace the stereotypes.[1] Research in the study of legend further suggests that until the fears that underlie these stories subside, welfare queen stories will continue to be told.[45]
Welfare recipients themselves are also working to challenge these stereotypes. Some authors have argued that the construction of the strong black woman image, one that portrays black mothers as resilient leaders of their household, stemmed from the desire of black women to resist and reject the welfare queen trope.[53]
In a study that interviewed 60 middle- to high-income black mothers, many of the mothers expressed ways they tried to counter the stereotype of the welfare queen that may be placed on them by others.[53] They would emphasize their educational backgrounds, mention their husbands, and dress to signal their belonging with the other white mothers to show that they did not fit the welfare queen stereotype.[53]
One downside to this strategy is that it risks perpetuating a false distinction between the deserving and undeserving poor.[1][54] Further, interviews with aid recipients revealed that the stigma of welfare and the welfare queen keeps many people from seeking help when they first need it. By the time they do apply for aid, they report being so far in debt that moving out of poverty can seem impossible.[1]
Research has shown that the ways that welfare was constructed around race and how the residual effects of this formation have affected black women. Specifically, research as shown that people of color, specifically black people and Hispanic people, have been overrepresented in less generous social programs. This disproportion resulted in their overpopulation in welfare.[55] This tendency, coupled with the overrepresentation of black people in media representation of people on welfare, has helped to produce the welfare queen trope. Lastly, southern states in the 1940s enforced "suitable home" laws which allowed welfare line workers to refuse to provide aid to those who infringed on sexual norms. This rule simultaneously reinforced and promoted stereotypes about black women and denied this group aid.[55]
Scholars have conducted extensive research on the experiences of black women within the welfare system, particularly in the context of the 1996 Personal Responsibility Act.[56][57] Because of the Personal Responsibility Act of 1996, work first programs began to take over welfare.[58] Work first programs impact black women in racialized and gendered ways.[58] These programs emphasize the need to place employment above all else in order to qualify for support. Black women are typically recommended for these programs when applying for welfare due.[59] This can be attributed to conscious or conscious bias by government employees who fall into the ideology about black women being less domestic and more ready for work programs.[59] This results in black women being seen as less likely to succeed in education reform programs or longer-term training programs. Essentially, racialized ideas about black women being lazy, overly sexually active, or as having a drug or alcohol addiction can influence welfare line workers to force this group into work-first programs.[58] Studies about this overrepresentation in welfare have led to more research into the ways that welfare can be reformed to better benefit black women.
See also
edit- Dog-whistle politics
- Feminization of poverty
- Le bruit et l'odeur
- Media hype
- Stereotypes of African Americans
- Welfare
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mould, Tom (2020). Overthrowing the Queen: Telling Stories of Welfare in America. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253048035.
- ^ Brockell, Gillian (June 17, 2019). "She was stereotyped as 'the welfare queen.' The truth was more disturbing, a new book says". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
- ^ a b Hays, Sharon (2004). Flat Broke with Children: Women in the Age of Welfare Reform. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 23, 121–122. ISBN 0-19-517601-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g Gilliam, Franklin (1999). "The 'Welfare Queen' Experiment: How Viewers React to Images of African-American Mothers on Welfare". Nieman Reports. 53 (2).
- ^ DeParle, Jason (April 7, 2012), "Welfare Limits Left Poor Adrift as Recession Hit", The New York Times, retrieved June 14, 2016
- ^ a b Blake, John (January 23, 2012). "Return of the 'Welfare Queen'". CNN.
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- ^ Alleged 'Welfare Queen' Is Accused Of $154,000 Ripoff. Johnson Publishing Company. December 19, 1974.
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ignored (help) - ^ Fialka, John (February 9, 1976). "Reagan's stories don't always check out". Eugene Register-Guard.
- ^ "Bond on Wrong Address". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 26, 1977.
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- ^ "The Truth Behind The Lies Of The Original 'Welfare Queen'". NPR.org. Retrieved September 25, 2021.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c d Rich, Camille Gear. "Reclaiming the Welfare Queen: Feminist and Critical Race Theory Alternatives to Existing Anti-Poverty Discourse". Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal.
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- ^ Gilman, Michele Estrin. "The Return of the Welfare Queen." American University Journal of Gender Social Policy and Law 22, no. 2 (2014): 247-279.
- ^ Hiralal, Kalpana (December 6, 2022). 'Sisters in the Struggle'. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003367390. ISBN 978-1-003-36739-0. S2CID 254391545.
- ^ Collins, Patricia Hill (1990). Black Feminist Thought (1st ed.). Hyman. pp. 69–96. ISBN 978-0-04-445137-2.
- ^ a b Gilens, Martin (2000). "The News Media and the Racialization of Poverty". Why Americans Hate Welfare: Race, Media, and the Politics of Antipoverty Policy. Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp. 102–32. ISBN 0-226-29365-3.
- ^ Bureau, US Census. "Poverty Rates for Blacks and Hispanics Reached Historic Lows in 2019". The United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 25, 2021.
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has generic name (help) - ^ Bas van Doorn, "Pre- and Post-Welfare Reform Media Portrayals of Poverty in the United States: The Continuing Importance of Race and Ethnicity." Politics & Policy 43#1 142-162.
- ^ Bas van Doorn, and Angela Bos, "Are Visual Depictions of Poverty in the US Gendered and Racialized?." in The Social Legitimacy of Targeted Welfare ed. by Wim Van Oorschot, (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017) pp 113–126; online
- ^ Givens, Monahan, Shtrulis 1.
- ^ a b c d e Masters, N. Tatiana; Lindhorst, Taryn P.; Meyers, Marcia K. (April 3, 2014). "Jezebel at the Welfare Office: How Racialized Stereotypes of Poor Women's Reproductive Decisions and Relationships Shape Policy Implementation". Journal of Poverty. 18 (2): 109–129. doi:10.1080/10875549.2013.833159. ISSN 1087-5549. PMC 4002050. PMID 24791134.
- ^ "Dethroning the Welfare Queen: The Rhetoric of Reform". Harvard Law Review. 107 (8): 2013–2030. June 1994. doi:10.2307/1341766. ISSN 0017-811X. JSTOR 1341766.
- ^ a b c d Nadasen, Premilla. "From widow to "welfare queen": Welfare and the politics of race." Black Women, Gender & Families 1, no. 2 (2007): 52-77.
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- ^ a b c Champlin, Emily R., "The Myth of the "Welfare Queen": Reproductive Oppression in the Welfare System" (2016). Poverty Law Conference & Symposium. 6. https://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/povlaw/6
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- ^ "About TANF". www.acf.hhs.gov. Retrieved April 3, 2021.
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- ^ a b c d e f g h Roberts, Dorthy. "The Value of Black Mothers' Work". Faculty Scholarship at Penn Law.
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- ^ Dobson, Kathy; Knezevic, Irena (2017). ""Liking and Sharing" the Stigmatization of Poverty and Social Welfare: Representations of Poverty and Welfare through Internet Memes on Social Media". TripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society. 15 (2): 777–795. doi:10.31269/triplec.v15i2.815.
- ^ a b Fine, Gary Alan; Turner, Patricia A. (2001). Whispers on the Color Line: Rumor and Race in America. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- ^ DiFonzo, Nicholas; Bordia, Prashant (2007). Rumor Psychology: Social and Organizational Approaches. Washington DC: American Psychological Association.
- ^ Lee, John D. (2014). An Epidemic of Rumors: How Stories Shape Our Perceptions of Disease. Logan: Utah State University Press.
- ^ Willer, Rob (January 20, 2017). "How to Have Better Political Conversations". TED talk. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
- ^ Broockman, David; Kalla, Joshua (2016). "Durably Reducing Transphobia: A Field Experiment on Door-to-Door Canvassing". Science. 352 (6282): 220–224. Bibcode:2016Sci...352..220B. doi:10.1126/science.aad9713. PMID 27124458. S2CID 206645910.
- ^ Galinsky, Adam D; Moskowitz, Gordon B. (2000). "Perspective-Taking: Decreasing Stereotype Expression, Stereotype Accessibility, and in-Group Favoritism". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 78 (4): 708–724. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.78.4.708. PMID 10794375.
- ^ Ellis, Bill (2005). Fine, Gary Alan; Campion-Vincent, Véronique; Heath, Chip (eds.). Legend/AntiLegend: Humor as an Integral Part of the Contemporary Legend Process. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers. pp. 123–140.
- ^ Cassiman, Shawn A. (2006). "Of Witches, Welfare Queens, and the Disaster Named Poverty: The Search for a Counter-Narrative". Journal of Poverty. 10 (4): 51–66. doi:10.1300/J134v10n04_03. S2CID 145630210.
- ^ a b c Dow, Dawn Marie (November 17, 2014). "Negotiating "The Welfare Queen" and "The Strong Black Woman"". Sociological Perspectives. 58 (1): 36–55. doi:10.1177/0731121414556546. ISSN 0731-1214. S2CID 144605852.
- ^ Katz, Michael B. (2013). The Undeserving Poor: America's Enduring Confrontation with Poverty: Fully Updated and Revised. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- ^ a b Race and the politics of welfare reform. Sanford Schram, Joe Soss, Richard C. Fording. Ann Arbor. 2003. ISBN 978-0-472-02551-0. OCLC 613205626.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Franceschet, Susan; Wolbrecht, Christina (March 2020). "From the Editors". Politics & Gender. 16 (1): 1–3. doi:10.1017/S1743923X20000033. ISSN 1743-923X. S2CID 233315314.
- ^ Davis, Dana-Ain (2004). "Manufacturing Mammies: The Burdens of Service Work and Welfare Reform among Battered Black Women". Anthropologica. 46 (2): 273–288. doi:10.2307/25606199. ISSN 0003-5459. JSTOR 25606199.
- ^ a b c Brush, Lisa Diane (2011). Poverty, battered women, and work in U.S. public policy. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-539850-2. OCLC 712780785.
- ^ a b Fox, Cybelle (September 1, 2010). "Three Worlds of Relief: Race, Immigration, and Public and Private Social Welfare Spending in American Cities, 1929". American Journal of Sociology. 116 (2): 453–502. doi:10.1086/653836. ISSN 0002-9602. PMID 21563363. S2CID 12509804.
Further reading
edit- Adair, Vivyan Campbell. From Good Ma to Welfare Queen: A genealogy of the poor woman in American literature, photography and culture (Psychology Press, 2000).
- Dow, Dawn Marie. "Negotiating 'The Welfare Queen' and 'The Strong Black Woman': African American Middle-Class Mothers' Work and Family Perspectives." Sociological Perspectives 58.1 (2015): 36–55.
- Gilman, Michele Estrin. "The Return of the Welfare Queen" The American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law 22#2 (2014) online
- Hancock, Ange-Marie. The Politics of Disgust: The Public Identity of the Welfare Queen (2004) online
- Kohler-Hausmann. Julilly. "Welfare Crises, Penal Solutions, and the Origins of the 'Welfare Queen'," Journal of Urban History, 41 (September 2015), 756–71. online
- Mould, Tom. Overthrowing the Queen: Telling Stories of Welfare in America (Indiana University Press, 2020)
- Somers, Margaret R, and Fred Block. 2005. "From Poverty to Perversity: Ideas, Markets, and Institutions over 200 Years of Welfare Debate." American Sociological Review 70(2): 260–287.
External links
edit- Levin, Josh. "The Welfare Queen." Slate. December 19, 2013. – article about Linda Taylor
- NPR. 2019. "The Original 'Welfare Queen'"