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RACIALIZING POVERTY AND POOR RELIEF

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2014

Ramón A. Gutiérrez*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Chicago
*
Ramón A. Gutiérrez, Department of History, University of Chicago, 1126 East 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637. E-mail: rgutierrez@uchicago.edu

Extract

Here is a dazzling book, one that offers a rich genealogy for reflection about our current preoccupations. Open up any newspaper. Switch on any television news program. What you will read and hear is a cacophony of voices, many of them discordant, on how to fix, fund, and perhaps shrink the federal government's spending on those insurance programs first created in the 1930s by the New Deal welfare state. Equally factious are the debates on immigration policy that some hope will resolve how the republic will meet its future labor needs and how it will placate its rising Latino voting public. Will we deport eleven million workers? Will we construct electrified fences to protect our southern border from “illegal” invasion? Will we offer unauthorized immigrants a path to citizenship? Stay tuned. And while racial politics are clearly at the covert center of these polemics, the discussion of race is rarely overt probably because some now pronounce us a post-racial society.

Type
State of the Discourse
Copyright
Copyright © W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research 2013 

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