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         Welfare Reform Analysis:     more books (100)
  1. Child support enforcement and assurance: one part of the anti-poverty strategy for women. (speech by welfare expert Paula Roberts) (Women and Welfare Reform: ... An article from: Social Justice
  2. Families' experience with welfare reform on reservations in Arizona.: An article from: Social Work Research by Shanta Pandey, Min Zhan, et all 2004-06-01
  3. Will welfare reform hold up?: With a recession in progress and caseloads increasing, we will soon know if reform has truly transformed the welfare system.: An article from: State Legislatures by Jack Tweedie, 2002-02-01
  4. Welfare Reform: What Are the Numbers, and Does Anyone Care?: An article from: Journal of Economic Issues by Richard V. Adkisson, 2001-03-01
  5. After the family wage: what do women want in social welfare? (speech by academic Nancy Fraser) (Women and Welfare Reform: Alternatives to Welfare: Men ... An article from: Social Justice by Nancy Fraser, 1994-03-22
  6. Welfare reform: the bad, the ugly, and the maybe not too awful.: An article from: Health and Social Work by Dennis L. Poole, 1996-11-01
  7. Welfare reform, success or failure?(Cover story): An article from: Policy & Practice by Ron Haskins, Mark Greenberg, 2006-03-01
  8. Welfare in a world of income instability. (speech by academic Lynn Burbridge) (Women and Welfare Reform: Can Welfare be Reformed?) (Transcript): An article from: Social Justice
  9. Rhetoric and Reality of Work-Based Welfare Reform.: An article from: Social Work by Maria Cancian, 2001-10-01
  10. Welfare reform and post-secondary education in Maine: a supplemental bibliography.: An article from: Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare by Luisa S. Deprez, 2006-06-01
  11. Current welfare reform: a return to the principles of 1834.: An article from: Journal of Economic Issues by William S. Kern, 1998-06-01
  12. State TANF spending: predictors of state tax effort to support welfare reform.(Aid to Families with Dependent Children)(Temporary Assistance for Needy ... article from: The Review of Policy Research by Harrell R., Jr. Rodgers, Kent L. Tedin, 2006-05-01
  13. Welfare "reform" and one community college.: An article from: Radical Teacher by Susan Jhirad, 2006-09-22
  14. Introduction: living on welfare - a personal view. (speech by Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey) (Women and Welfare Reform: Can Welfare be Reformed?) (Transcript): An article from: Social Justice

61. The Brookings Institution
analysis of Participation Rate Policy Options welfare reform Beyond Paper,May 2002 Adam Thomas, Senior Research Analyst, Economic Studies
http://www.brook.edu/views/papers/thomas/20020524.htm

Brookings

News Releases
Calendar of Events Transcripts ... Contact Us
Analysis of Participation Rate Policy Options
May 2002
Adam Thomas Senior Research Analyst Economic Studies
View
Get Adobe Acrobat Reader Abstract
(The complete paper is available using the View Full Paper link above.) Note: The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and should not be attributed to the staff, officers or trustees of The Brookings Institution
SEARCH BROOKINGS Advanced Search Related Content Welfare Reform: Building on Success Feather Houstoun's welfare legacy Unraveling the Safety Net: Policy Implications of Welfare Caseloads in Cities Policy Briefs Another State Fiscal Crisis: Is There a Better Way? Can Work Experience Programs Work for Welfare Recipients? The Structure of the TANF Block Grant Events The Social Policy Agenda: Crowded Out or Moving Up? State Fiscal Crisis: Implications for Low-Income Families Living On and Off Welfare: Family Experiences and Ethnographic Research Related Research Projects WRB Project Home Page Scholars Gary Burtless Ron Haskins Andrea Kane Joyce A. Ladner

62. The Brookings Institution
McMurrer (Urban Institute, 1998). welfare reform An analysis of theIssues, (Urban Institute, 1995). Challenge to Leadership Economic
http://www.brook.edu/scholars/isawhill.htm

Brookings

News Releases
Calendar of Events Transcripts ... Contact Us
Isabel V. Sawhill
Senior Fellow, Economic Studies
Expertise
Child care, education, federal budget, marriage, poverty and inequality, social welfare policy, teen pregnancy
Current Projects
Improving children's prospects; welfare reform; the future of low-income families Education
Ph.D. (1968), B.A. (1962), New York University Background
Current Position: President, National Campaign To Prevent Teen Pregnancy. Previous Positions: Senior Fellow, Urban Institute; Associate Director, Office of Management and Budget (1993-95); Visiting Professor, Georgetown University Law School; Director, National Commission for Employment Policy; President, Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management Publications Books: Welfare Reform and Beyond: The Future of the Safety Net , co-editor with R. Kent Weaver, Ron Haskins, and Andrea Kane (2002) Updating the Social Contract: Growth and Opportunity in the New Century , with Rudolph Penner and Timothy Taylor (W.W. Norton, 2000) Getting Ahead: Economic and Social Mobility in America , with Daniel P. McMurrer (Urban Institute, 1998)

63. CJCJ: Publications
The Color of Justice An analysis of Juvenile Adult Court Transfers in Income InjusticeThe Impact of welfare reform's Fleeing Felon Regulations on SSI
http://www.cjcj.org/pubs/index.php
document.write( lmonth + " " + date + ", " + year ); Search our Site: document.write('') Publications To receive a Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice publication, download a copy from this page for free. If the publication is not available, contact our national office at (415) 621-5561 to request one. PDF publications require Adobe Acrobat Reader: Our research is made possible with the generous support of our funders
Visit Our Archive For More Publications
Juvenile Justice NEW! Community-based Alternative to Juvenile Detention is a Success with Youth Offenders
September 2002 Press Release View the PDF NEW! A California Advocate’s Guide to Juvenile Placements
March 2002 NEW! In Brief-Information Sharing and Confidentiality: A Legal Primer to Help the Community, the Bench and the Bar Implement Change in the Juvenile Justice System
March 2002 View the PDF NEW! Aftercare as Afterthought: Re-entry and the California Youth Authority
September 2002 Press Release Exec Summary View the PDF Barriers and Promising Approaches to Workforce and Youth Development for Young Offenders
A project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation

64. New York State Comptroller - Reports
199899 Budget analysis Review of the Governor's Proposed Budget, February1998; Evaluating welfare reform A Proposal for New York, June 1997.
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/reports/
Home Search this site:
Frequently Requested Publications:
State Budget Reports Reports on Education Retirement Systems Contracts

65. Columbia News ::: Six Years After Welfare Reform, Public Opposition To Welfare S
the US Congress passed landmark welfare reform legislation in have become less opposedto welfare benefits since enacted, according to an analysis by Columbia
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/02/04/welfare_spending.html
the Public Affairs and Record Home Page Current News News Archive Video Briefs Video Forums ... Home Page Six Years After Welfare Reform, Public Opposition to Welfare Spending Declines By James Devitt When the U.S. Congress passed landmark welfare reform legislation in 1996, elected officials had the support of the public to back them. Six years later, Congress is debating whether to reauthorize the legislation, officially titled Temporary Assistance to Need Families (TANF). However, Americans have become less opposed to welfare benefits since the law was first enacted, according to an analysis by Columbia Political Science Department Chair Robert Shapiro and Greg Shaw, Ph.D. '98, a professor at Illinois Wesleyan University. The research was conducted at Columbia's Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP), an interdisciplinary research organization for the social sciences and public policy. Analyzing poll results from several sources, including Gallup, the New York Times/CBS News and the Wall Street Journal/NBC, Shapiro and Shaw noted that in December 1994 57 percent of respondents thought that "most people who receive money from welfare could get along without it if they tried." But by January 2001 this percentage had slipped to 44 percent. Conversely, in December 1994 only 36 percent of respondents felt recipients "really need this help," but by January 2001, 47 percent held this view. Shapiro and Shaw also note that according to a survey by the National Election Studies that between 1996 and 2000, the percentage of Americans in favor of cutting federal spending on food stamps fell from 45 percent to 30 percent.

66. Welfare Reform
detailed analysis of the provisions of the federal law most likely to affect vulnerablechildren and families. WHY WORRY ABOUT THE IMPACT OF welfare reform ON
http://www.nccp.org/cwrb3.html
About the Center
Media Resources

Newsletters

Child Poverty Facts
...
NCCP Jobs
The New Welfare Law and Vulnerable Families: The Implications for Child Welfare/Child Protection Systems
(PDF version of the Full Text)
INTRODUCTION
Recent federal welfare legislation, P.L. 104-193, The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, can have a major impact on the health and development of young children living in poverty. This issue brief examines the potential impact of P.L. 104-193 on vulnerable families already in or at risk of entering the child welfare/child protection system. It includes an overview of the challenge states face, questions for state legislators, policymakers, and advocates to consider in developing and implementing their state welfare strategies, and a detailed analysis of the provisions of the federal law most likely to affect vulnerable children and families.
WHY WORRY ABOUT THE IMPACT OF WELFARE REFORM ON CHILD WELFARE AND CHILD PROTECTIVE SERVICE?

67. UNC Helps North Carolina Report On Welfare Reform
UNC helps North Carolina Report on welfare reform. Work First provides welfareto-workservices such as to capture data on the program for detailed analysis.
http://www.sas.com/subscriptions/sascom/julyaug01/ncdhhs.html

68. A Brief History Of The Office Of The Assistant Secretary For Planning And Evalua
and analysis for many major major initiatives. In particular, ASPE provided leadershipand analytic staff for the President's health care and welfare reform
http://aspe.hhs.gov/aspehistory.htm
Office of the Assistant Secretary for
P LANNING and E VALUATION
Brief History
By Gerald Britten, formerly Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program Systems For more than a third of a century, the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) has provided policy advice and analysis for the Secretary of Health and Human Services (Health, Education, and Welfare HEW until 1979). It has focused on issues of importance particularly to the Secretary, the administration, and the Congress. The office strives to maintain a reputation for high quality and objective analysis concerning a wide range of health and human service issues, and for having an experienced and first rate analytic staff. Many ASPE staff have moved on to senior positions in government, academia, and industry. The office was established in 1965 in the Office of the Secretary of HEW as the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Program Coordination. It was based on the "systems analysis" model of the Department of Defense following President Johnson's call for a government-wide introduction this model, which emphasized a central planning staff independent of program functions, objective analysis based on research, and the utilization of various systems analysis tools, such as multi-year plans and budgets. The new office in HEW had approximately 20 analysts for health, education, and welfare issues, and an office to help administer a program planning and budgeting system. In the words of Alice Rivlin, an early Assistant Secretary, the creation of ASPE brought into the Secretary's office a group of people who were trained to think analytically and whose job it was to improve the process of decision making.

69. Status Report On Research On The Outcomes Of Welfare Reform, 2002: Main Page
Summary Earnings Records to Assess welfare reform Outcomes; of Child Outcomes in Statewelfare Evaluations and on TANF in Illinois (formerly analysis of Survey
http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/welf-ref-outcomes02/
Status Report on Research on the Outcomes
of Welfare Reform
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Bobby P. Jindal
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation Don Winstead
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Services Policy June 2002 This report is available on the Internet at:
http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/welf-ref-outcomes02/index.htm
How to Obtain a Printed Copy
Contents
Chapters:
  • Introduction and Overview
    Obtaining a Printed Copy
    To obtain a printed copy of this report, send or fax the title and your name and address to: Human Services Policy, Room 404E
    Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
    200 Independence Ave, SW
    Washington, DC 20201 Fax: (202) 690-6562
    Where to?
  • 70. Welfare Reform
    of Links American Public Human Services Association See the APHSA welfare Reformpage organization and policy institute that conducts research and analysis on a
    http://www.ciser.cornell.edu/info/welfare.shtml
    Home General Information Grant Proposals Data Archive ... Sitemap Data Archive About the Archive All About Us Location and Hours Archive Staff News and Announcements Archive Data Our Use Policies Locating and Using Archive Datasets Using the CISER Proxy Server Archive Tutorial ... Recent Additions on CD-ROM Useful Internet Resources Data Sources for Social Scientists Public Opinion Surveys Welfare Reform Search CISER
    Hot Topics on the Internet: Welfare Reform These sites provide the text or substantive summaries of reports on welfare reform, with emphasis on statistical information. As with many "hot topics," welfare reform is a politically charged public policy issue, and some sites are compiled and maintained by groups espousing distinct social or economic philosophies. Consequently, the information they provide warrants the same evaluative approach that any other source, print or online, requires. Given the scope of the topic, this is a brief, non-exhaustive list. Forward site locations for consideration to Pam Baxter , CISER Data Archive(pmb9@cornell.edu). United States Government Sites
    New York State Sites

    Lists of Links
    American Public Human Services Association
    See the APHSA Welfare Reform page. The

    71. Sanford Schram
    reform. Race and welfare reform A Statistical analysis. Review of WhatGovernment Can Do by Benjamin Page and James Simmons. ADVOCACY
    http://www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/GSSW/schram/
    Sanford Schram (sschram@brynmawr.edu)
    Sanford Schram teaches social theory and social policy in the Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research at Bryn Mawr College.
    (click here for vita) Education Ph.D. in Political Science, Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy, State University of New York at Albany , 1979 (Distinguished Alumnus Award, 1988) Address:
    Room 212
    Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research
    Bryn Mawr College
    300 Airdale Rd.
    Bryn Mawr PA 19010-1697
    Phone : Fax: Email:
    sschram@brynmawr.edu

    Hours:
    T 9:00-11:30 a.m. W 9:00-10:00 a.m. BOOKS PUBLISHED: Words of Welfare: The Poverty of Social Science and the Social Science of Poverty (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995) (Michael Harrington Award) Tales of the State: Narrative in U.S. Politics and Public Policy (Lanham MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1997) (edited with Philip T. Neisser) ... , Sanford F. Schram, Joe Soss and Richard Fording, eds. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, in press). RECENT BOOKS IN WHICH I HAVE CHAPTERS: Lost Ground: Welfare Reform, Poverty, and Beyond, Edited by Randy Albelda and Ann Withorn Foreward by Barbara Ehrenreich

    72. Web Resources: Welfare & Economic Rights
    Social Policy (http//www.clasp.org) Go to Publications section for data, statisticsand policy analysis on welfare reauthorization, welfare reform, child care
    http://www.datacenter.org/research/women.htm
    The * symbol represents a site we find particularly useful. POLICY ANALYST SOURCES Applied Research Center http://www.arc.org
    Check out the Welfare Advocacy Research Project (WARP) section. Research on racial discrimination and privatization of social services under welfare reform. Searchable. ARC is a public policy, educational and research institute whose work emphasizes issues of race and social change. Center for Law and Social Policy http://www.clasp.org
    Go to Publications section for data, statistics and policy analysis on welfare reauthorization, welfare reform, child care and early education, child support and low-income fathers, workforce development and job creation, reproductive health and teen issues, child welfare, couples and marriage policy, low-income civil legal assistance. Searchable. CLASP, a national non-profit organization, conducts research, policy analysis, technical assistance, and advocacy on issues related to economic security for low-income families with children. Center on Budget and Policy Priorities http://www.cbpp.org

    73. Welfare Costs And Caseloads
    Some have used a simple trend analysis, while others have used a in the currentenvironment is to adjust their forecasts for the impacts of welfare reform.
    http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/3rdLevel/caseloads.htm
    Home About Mathematica What's New Publications ... Search Answering "What If" Questions About
    Welfare Costs and Caseloads

    Federal welfare reform gave states new freedom as well as new challenges. To balance these factors and design an effective program, a state must be able to predict how proposed reforms will affect costs and caseloads. Mathematica Policy Research offers a fast and inexpensive tool, the MATH microsimulation model , for making these predictions. MATH, initially used to estimate how changes in AFDC, food stamps, and SSI would affect federal costs and caseloads, can also help states simulate programs under TANF, including the impact of time limits on costs and caseloads. Estimating Costs and Caseloads
    Understanding the Impact of Time Limits

    Assessing Program Interactions

    Identifying Winners and Losers
    ...
    Forecasting Costs and Caseloads
    Estimating Costs and Caseloads For more than two decades, we have estimated the impact on costs and caseloads of hundreds of different program and policy options for AFDC and food stamps. These estimates have proved useful and effective for policymakers; in fact, federal legislative provisions have been based directly on MATH model results.

    74. Welfare Reform Seminar - Fall 2000
    welfare reform NonExperimental Approaches Fall 2000. Thursday, Sept. 14 V. JosephHotz , UCLA, NBER, and RAND “The Long Term Gains from GAIN A Re-analysis
    http://ucdata.berkeley.edu/new_web/welseminar/fall2000/fall2000list.html
    Seminar Series: Evaluating Welfare Reform: Non-Experimental Approaches
    Fall 2000 Thursday, Sept. 14
    V. Joseph Hotz , UCLA, NBER, and RAND

    “The Long Term Gains from GAIN:
    A Re-Analysis of the Impacts of the California GAIN Program”
    (abstract)
    (handout) Thursday, Sept. 28
    Hans Bos, MDRC

    “Experiments as Instruments: Alternative Uses of Random Assignment for Evaluation” Wednesday, Nov. 1
    Sheldon Danziger, University of Michigan

    “Work, Well-Being and Mental Health: Early Lessons of Welfare Reform”
    Note location: SRC Conference Room, 2538 Channing Way (abstract) (background papers) Thursday, Nov. 9 Howard Bloom, MDRC "Using Non-Experimental Methods to Estimate Program Impacts: Statistical Models, Matches and Muddles" (abstract) Thursday, Dec. 7 Jacob Klerman, RAND “A Stock-Flow Analysis of the Welfare Caseload: Insights From California Economic Conditions” Note time: 3 PM (abstract) Seminars will be held at 4 pm at the Gifford Room 221 Kroeber Hall (click on links for maps), UC Berkeley , except Wednesday, November 1 at Survey Research Center Conference Room, 2538 Channing Way and Thursday, December 7th at 3 PM.

    75. Welfare Reform
    Issue Focus welfare reform. The truth is we do not yet know. More Symposium. • Should Housing Have a Role in welfare reform?
    http://www.urban.org/welfare/overview.htm
    Welfare Reform
    An Analysis of the Issues
    Author(s): Isabel V. Sawhill (editor) Other Availability: Order Online Printer-Friendly Version Published: May 01, 1995 Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/url.cfm?ID=306620
    The nonpartisan Urban Institute publishes studies, reports, and books on timely topics worthy of public consideration. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Urban Institute, its trustees, or its funders. INTRODUCTION No one likes the current welfare system. Governors complain that federal law is overly prescriptive and are willing to take less federal money in return for more flexibility. The public believes that welfare is anti-work and anti-family although polls show that the public wants welfare reformed in ways that do not penalize children. Welfare recipients find dealing with the system degrading and demoralizing; most would prefer to work . Experts note that welfare has done little to stem the growth of poverty among children. In all but two states, welfare benefits (including food stamps) are insufficient to move a family above the poverty line In short, the current indictment against the welfare system has four particulars:

    76. Potential Effects Of Congressional Welfare Reform Legislation On Family Incomes
    See LaDonna Pavetti, Who Is Affected by Time Limits?, in welfare reform An Analysisof the Issues, Isabel V. Sawhill, editor, The Urban Institute, 1995. 11.
    http://www.urban.org/welfare/PEC72696.htm
    Potential Effects of Congressional Welfare Reform Legislation on Family Incomes
    Author(s): Sheila R. Zedlewski Sandra J. Clark Eric Meier Keith Watson Other Availability: Order Online Printer-Friendly Version Published: July 26, 1996 Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/url.cfm?ID=406622
    The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the Urban Institute, its trustees, or its sponsors. Table of Contents LIST OF TABLES
    • Table 1 : Summary of Major Changes in Income Security Programs Proposed by H.R. 3734
    • Table 2 : Budget and Caseload Effects of Major Provisions of the Welfare Reform Act (H.R. 3734)
    • Table 3 : Effects of H.R. 3734 on Total Family Income and Poverty
    • Table 4 : Characteristics of Families Losing Income Under H.R. 3734
    • Table 5 : Effects of H.R. 3734 on Poverty Using Alternative Labor Supply Assumptions
    • Table 6 : Effects of Modifications to H.R. 3734 on Poverty and the Poverty Gap

    77. CHILDREN NOW: Welfare Reform Press Release
    The study, Children and welfare reform High Stakes, Low Coverage Content Analysison welfare reform Reporting, can be found in its entirety on the Children
    http://www.childrennow.org/economics/WelfRef98/welfarepress.html
    Our Programs CALIFORNIA FOCUS TALKING WITH KIDS WORKING FAMILIES HEALTH News Archives
    PRESS RELEASES RELATED ARTICLES E-NEWSLETTERS VIDEO ARCHIVE Children Now Mission Statement ...
    Meet the Board
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    January 1998 For Media Assistance
    Media Coverage of Welfare Reform Misses the Target: Kids
    Hollywood, CA:
    The nation's major newspapers and magazines have overlooked the largest population affected by welfare reform: children. Welfare reform dominated the news across the nation in 1996 and 1997 when Congress and the states debated how to craft and implement reform. However, children, who comprise 69% of all welfare recipients, were the primary focus in just 6% of the welfare reform news stories. The news content analysis commissioned by Children Now, a national child policy and advocacy organization, and conducted by Dr. Katharine Heintz-Knowles of the University of Washington, examined the content of the following national news sources during June-August 1996 and June-August 1997: The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, Associated Press, Time, Newsweek and U.S. News and World Report.

    78. TANF FINANCIAL DATA: Spending Under Welfare Reform
    Spending under welfare reform The spreadsheets linked below reflect those numbersthat were reported by States on their TANF financial report only on the
    http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofs/data/
    Questions? Privacy Site Index Contact Us ... Search
    TANF Financial Data
    Reporting Requirements States are required by statute ( Social Security Act , Title IV-A, Section 411 ) to report on:
    • Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) and Program expenditure data , including:
      • data on expenditures for administrative costs and data on transitional services to families that have ceased to receive cash assistance because they have found employment
      States are also required ( Social Security Act , Title IV-A, Section 409 ) to share in the costs of the TANF program. A statutory maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement calls for the expenditure of State funds on the program to remain at certain historic levels. The Department of Health and Human Services has developed a financial data reporting form (Form ACF-196), which States are required to submit no later than 45 days after the end of each quarter.
      • States are also required by statute to report programmatic data such as caseload numbers and caseload demographics We will provide separate summaries of TANF programmatic data as the data becomes available.

    79. Adolescent Outcomes, Poverty Status, And Welfare Reform: An Analysis Based On Th
    Help! Adolescent Outcomes, Poverty Status, and welfare reform AnAnalysis based on the Survey of Program Dynamics. Author info
    http://ideas.repec.org/p/wop/jopovw/269.html
    This file is part of IDEAS , which uses RePEc data
    Papers Articles Software Books ... Help!
    Adolescent Outcomes, Poverty Status, and Welfare Reform: An Analysis based on the Survey of Program Dynamics
    Author info Abstract Publisher info Related research ... Statistics Author Info Eileen Trzcinski
    Jerry Brandell
    Abstract

    In the early stages of research on the impact of welfare reform, most research focused on caseload reduction, employment outcomes, and barriers to employment. Even in research that examined the impact of welfare reform on children, the emphases centered on infants, preschoolers, and children at the grade school level. Issues concerning the impact on children in middle childhood and early adolescence were not considered a crucial area for research (Brooks, Hair, and Zaslow, 2001). We argue below, however, that children in late middle childhood and early adolescence are likely to face significant challenges in the wake of welfare reform. Our arguments are based on the premise that adolescence is a developmental epoch characterized by rapid physical, intellectual, and socioemotional growth and change, which is frequently accompanied by turbulence, perplexity, and confusion. Hence this research was undertaken specifically to examine potential effects of welfare reform on children in late childhood through adolescence. The research described below uses the Survey of Program Dynamics to examine the links between outcomes for adolescents, source of income, mother?s employment, and welfare reform. Specifically, the research examines how poverty status and family welfare receipt during middle childhood interact with current poverty status and welfare receipt during adolescence to influence a range of outcomes for adolescents. The outcomes that are examined include both parent reports and the set of indicators that are available in the 1998 adolescent self-administered questionnaire.

    80. Welfare Reform
    Reconciliation Act of 1996. Specific research topics include Analysisof welfare reform legislation's impact on health care access;;
    http://www.gwhealthpolicy.org/welfare_reform.htm
    The Center was at the forefront of analyzing the impact of welfare reform on the health system generally and the Medicaid program, specifically. CHSRP's research projects have grown out of its early and groundbreaking analysis of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. Specific research topics include:
    • Analysis of welfare reform legislation's impact on health care access; Effect of welfare and immigration reform on immigrants access to Medicaid and health care services; Impact of welfare reform on Medi-Cal enrollment and policies to encourage enrollment; State compliance with Medicaid requirements in welfare reforms; and Stigma's impact on Medicaid enrollment.
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