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Beyond Welfare Queens: developing a race, class and gender analysis of
Welfare and Welfare Reform
By Chris Crass
In 1996 the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act became law and
dismantled the 61 year old program of federally guaranteed Aid to Families with
Dependent Children or what is common referred to as welfare. The debate surrounding
welfare reform was dominated primarily by white male politicians and journalists
and focused predominately on Black women and their families living in poverty.
The discussion in the mainstream media about welfare and welfare reform has
centered on what Newsweek's columnist Joe Klein described as the "sexually irresponsible
culture of poverty". The accusation that poverty is the result of the individual
failings of single mothers to care for their families has shaped the debates
about welfare. The actual lives, let alone ideas, of mothers on welfare have
been pushed to the margins of debate unless they legitimize popular stereotypes.
While the political drive to cut welfare is not new, neither is the image of
the Black welfare mother. In this essay, I will examine the history of welfare
and welfare reform from a radical political perspective that places Black women
at the center of an interconnected analysis of race, class and gender. As it
is Black womanhood that is positioned as the stereotype and image of the welfare
mother, I wanted to explore the history of welfare and the development of controlling
images of mothers on AFDC. A reading of this history from a radical perspective
will help develop a better understanding of how race, class and gender shape
US society. By developing this analysis through a study of history, this paper
aims to develop an analysis that can challenge myths of the "welfare queen".
My radical political perspective in this essay is strongly influenced by Black
feminist thought which will outlined throughout this paper as it guides my analysis.
From a Mother's Pension to AFDC to TANF: a history of race, gender and
welfare policy
The history of aid to women with children began with the Mother's Pension program
advanced by mainly white middle-class reformers during the Progressive Era (1896-1914).
The Progressive Era marked a period of time when sweeping reforms were made
in government at local, state and federal level. The reform efforts were generally
organized by an upper to middle class white constituency that believed that
government should be managed professionally and that middle-class values should
be spread throughout society, particularly to poor immigrant and working class
communities. The campaign for the Mother's Pension program pushed for greater
government responsibility in the lives of poor women and their children. The
poor mothers the women reformers campaigned for were widows. In 1900, widows
headed 77 percent of all mother only families. The advocates of the Mother's
Pension focused on widows as mothers who were deemed socially "worthy" of public
support. The pension would be used to help maintain families and reward mothers
who stayed home with their children. The women reformers of the Progressive
Era, in general, believed that the proper role of the mother was to stay home
and care for the children. The pension would therefore help maintain established
gender roles; this being the explicit strategy of the reformers. The size of
the pension to widow's and their families was small, bit it did help families
stay slightly above poverty levels. Between 1911 and 1921, forty states had
passed the Mother's Pension program and by 1932, the program existed in all
but two states.
The Mother's Pension was based on the model of the "worthy" mother. In a society
stratified by race that privileges whiteness at the expense of Blackness, this
meant that the program by and large benefited white mothers. Historian of social
policy, Mimi Abramovitz writes in her book Under Attack, Fighting Back: Women
and Welfare in the United States, "the glorification of Anglo-American motherhood,
the belief in childrearing as exclusively women's work, the narrow vision of
proper single mothers as widows and the identification of worthiness with assimilation
[into white-Anglo middle class society] condemned other mothers who did not
live up to these ideals as immoral and unworthy of aid."
The Mother's Pension had little to no direct impact on Black mothers. Black
womanhood has historically been devalued next to the idealized white womanhood.
During slavery, while the social ideal of womanhood conjured up notions of being
placed upon a pedestal of femininity, Black women worked alongside Black men,
in what Angela Davis called a deformed equality under a racialized oppression
that did not discriminate between women and men. Furthermore, as Black Feminist
theorist Barbara Christian writes, "the enslaved African woman became the basis
for the definition of our society's Other." The notion of the other is rooted
in either/or dichotomous thinking which catagorizes people, ideas and things
in terms of their differences from one another. Black feminist writer bell hooks
argues that either/or dichotomous thinking is "the central ideological component
of all systems of domination in Western society." Patricia Hill Collins writes
in her book, Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics
of Empowerment, that difference in dichotomous thinking is characterized as
being in opposition, "One part is not simply different from its counterpart;
it is inherently opposed to its 'other'." In Western society, Collins writes,
"Whites and Blacks, males and females, thought and feeling are not complementary
counterparts - they are fundamentally different entities related only through
their definitions as opposites." In a society marked by racial inequality, class
stratification and gender subordination, to be positioned in opposition to dominate
groups is to be simultaneously objectified by those who exercise power. "Domination
always involves attempts to objectify the subordinate group.", writes Collins.
And hooks explains that, "as objects, one's reality is defined by others, one's
identity is created by others, one's history named only in ways that define
one's relationship to those who are subject" and that "as subjects, people have
the right to define their own reality, establish their own identities, name
their history", as subjects possess or exercise the power to define.
It is important that we explore these underlying discourses in the Mother's
Pension program, as these discourses are at the ideological core of welfare
programs, welfare reform and discussions on poverty in general. This is why
it is important that we develop a framework of analysis as we look at this history.
At the same time that the Mother's Pension was adopted, other programs that
would have benefited all poor women, all children, both single and two parent
families (through a family allowance) were rejected. These alternative program
proposals were based on the idea that public support was a right not a privilege.
The programs that were able to generate support from power constituencies in
the reform movement, business or the government, were programs that enforced
the notion that public support was a burden on society and not a right of the
public. The dichotomous notions of "worthy and "unworthy" mothers developed
in the Mother's Pension program will continue throughout the evolution of welfare
programs. Worthy women were rewarded with assistance barely above the poverty
line, while unworthy mothers in poverty are further punished and made an example
of to all of society. Race plays a significant role in this class based poverty
program designed to serve women and their children.
The next major event in the development of welfare took place during the Great
Depression of the 1930's. Amid widespread unemployment, poverty, a crashing
economy and growing social unrest, the federal government passed the Social
Security Act of 1935. The significance of this Act was profound, as Abramovitz
explains, "this landmark legislation transferred responsibility for social welfare
from the states to the federal government, replacing nineteenth-century laissez-faire
economics with twentieth century government intervention" The Social Security
Act modeled many of the existing social welfare programs that had existed for
over 30 years in most of the industrialized European nations.
As part of the New Deal legislation created under President Roosevelt, the
Social Security Act established two forms of cash benefits: social insurance
and public assistance. Social insurance programs included Social Security and
Unemployment Insurance. Social Security is a pension for retired workers that
is generated through a payroll tax that is paid half by the worker and half
by the employer. Unemployment Insurance covers the wages of those temporarily
unemployed and the program is funded entirely be a tax paid for by the employer.
Because these two entitlement programs have benefited a large segment of society,
they are thought of as social rights rather than government assistance.
However, these two programs did not cover everyone. The social insurance programs
of 1935, excluded the majority of Black workers in the country. In order to
win the support of Southern political leaders, the two entitlement programs
did not include those in agricultural and domestic work. With the majority of
Black men and women working in these two occupations, especially in the South,
social insurance programs furthered race based economic inequality. In addition
to the exclusion of Black women workers in agriculture and domestic work, both
white and Black women were excluded from Social Security as the following occupations
did not receive this federal entitlement; teachers, nurses, hospital employees,
librarians and social workers - all of which are heavily occupied by women.
Thus writes Jill Quadagno, author of The Color of Welfare: How Racism Undermined
the War on Poverty, the nations first social wage provided little or nothing
for most women and most African Americans.
The public assistance programs were: Aid to Dependent Children (ADC), Old Age
Assistance and Aid to the Blind; Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled
was added in 1956. ADC, which would become Aid to Families with Dependent Children
in 1962, was a continuation of the Mother's Pension program, and carried the
same dichotomous notions of worthy and unworthy mothers. ADC, which came to
be known as welfare, was severely limited by institutionalized racism and sexism.
To begin with Congress rejected a definition of a dependent child that would
have entitled any poor child assistance if the family was either unemployed
or could not provide a reasonable subsistence. This definition would have included
children living in single or two parent homes as well as children living with
extended families. ADC only offered assistance to children without parental
support due to death, long-term absence or incapacity of the family breadwinner.
ADC was also limited by Southern political leaders who again deprived Black
women in the South from federal entitlements. Southern congressman, who chaired
key committees, insisted that states reserve the right to establish the criteria
for eligibility and make the decisions about who received benefits. Southern
leaders prevented Black women and men from receiving federal entitlements, because
the economy of the South depended on the underpaid labor of Black workers to
generate enormous profit. Federal entitlements like ADC would have created opportunities
for Black women to leave low-paying jobs. The systematic exclusion of the majority
of Black women from federal entitlement programs and public assistance demonstrates
two of the three main forms of oppression in Black women's lives as described
by Black feminist theorist Patricia Hill Collins. In Black Feminist Thought,
Collins sets out to develop a framework for understanding and theorizing Black
women's lives. She begins this framework with a discussion of Black women's
oppression, which "has been structured along three interdependent dimensions".
The first is the exploitation of Black women's labor, on which Collins writes,
"The drudgery of enslaved African-American women's work and the grinding poverty
of 'free' wage labor in the rural South tellingly illustrate the high costs
Black women have paid for survival." The underpaid labor or slave labor that
Collins mentions was/is a form of exploitation in the lives of Black women and
it was/is also a form of economic and racial privilege for the slave-master
and the wealthy in the South who generate profit from this exploitation. Underpaid
labor in the South resulted in families working full-time jobs living in poverty
while the profit of this labor created the wealth of the white upper-class.
Hence, the economic motivation behind Southern leaders racist practice of excluding
Black workers from entitlements and Black women from public assistance, brings
us to the second form of oppression, which is structural political inequality.
"The political dimension of oppression has denied African-American women the
rights and privileges routinely extended to white male citizens," argues Collins.
She then notes that Black women have been forbidden to vote, excluded from public
office, denied literacy, attended underfunded public schools, treated more severely
in the criminal justice system and discriminated against in federal assistance
programs as well. While political oppression disempowers Black women it institutionalizes
power inequality that benefits white men, particularly those who hold economic
power. As the example of Social Security and ADC demonstrate, Black women who
are denied formal political power are further oppressed both politically and
economically because of their race and gender by Southern leaders who directly
benefit from this oppression.
The third form of oppression, according to Collins, is the ideological dimension
by which "certain assumed qualities are attached to Black women and how these
qualities are used to justify oppression." Collins writes, "From the mammies,
Jezebels and breeder women of slavery to the smiling Aunt Jemimas on pancake
mix boxes, ubiquitous Black prostitutes and ever present welfare mothers of
contemporary popular culture, the nexus of negative stereotypical images applied
to African-American women has been fundamental to Black women's oppression."
This is a process that involves both racializing and gendering meaning. Taking
from the groundbreaking work of Michael Omi and Howard Winant's book Racial
Formation in the United States, Collins explains racialization as a process
that "involves attaching racial meaning to a previously racially unclassified
relationship, social practice or group." The process of gendering similarly
involves attaching gendered meaning to previously ungendered relationships,
social practices or group. The third form of oppression in Black women's lives
as outlined by Collin's, has significantly shaped the formation and discourse
of welfare. Let us look at ADC, which became AFDC, and the many layers of negative
stereotypes and ideological oppression.
As mentioned earlier, ADC was originally a program available primarily to white
single mothers. Several major events changed the racial composition of ADC recipients.
As the number of Black mothers receiving ADC grew, the program developed a racial
coding that attached Black racialized meaning to a program that originally benefited
white women almost exclusively. Whereas the dichotomous notions of the Mother's
Pension focused on unworthy and worthy mothers, ADC will develop notions of
worth related to the race of the recipient; to be a Black mother in poverty
receiving ADC is to become the symbol of the unworthy woman. How did this happen.
To begin with, in 1939, the Congress amended the Social Security Act. A new
program called Old Age Insurance (OAI) was created, which provided more then
the public assistance program, Old Age Assistance. OAI moved up the starting
date to begin collecting benefits and it also created benefits for deceased
workers' widows and children. This impacted women in two ways. Black women who
were widows of working men, or had worked themselves, were largely unable to
receive OAI as most Black workers (male or female) were still excluded from
Social Security benefits all together. Large numbers of white women who were
widows of white workers went from ADC for OAI. Women who switched to OAI received
double the amount of benefits.
The next major event effecting welfare programs took place during and after
World War II. There was an enormous movement of Black people from rural areas
into cities in the South and from the South into the North. The promise of jobs
and the need to escape racial and sexual violence in the South motivated hundreds
of thousands of Black people to move to large northern cities. In the north,
Black women had greater access to federal programs like ADC and later AFDC.
The eligibility requirements for ADC still limited the number of poor women,
especially Black women, who could receive assistance in the 40's and 50's. In
the 60's during the War on Poverty and the Great Society programs reformed the
requirements in favor of Black women and expanded some of the welfare benefits.
These programs were initiated due to pressure from protest movements, particularly
the Civil Rights and Welfare Rights movements, along with widespread urban unrest
in the mid to late 60. ADC and later AFDC, became one of the few federal entitlement
programs available to Black women, and because other programs like OAI included
poor and working class white mothers, ADC became a program that served disproportionately
Black women. While white women continued to make up a majority of those on welfare,
Black women where on welfare in higher percentages then their percentage in
the population as a whole (for example, a city might be 20 percent Black, while
40 percent of those on welfare were Black, yet the majority receiving welfare
overall remained white). The number of Black women receiving welfare grew from
21% of the mothers on ADC in 1942 to 48% in 1961.
In 1960 2o percent of all whites, nearly 50 percent of families living in female
headed-households and more than half of all African Americans were poor. In
1962 the Social Security Act was amended, which changed ADC to AFDC and allowed
women on welfare to work and collect benefits, opened up eligibility to include
some two parent families, and permitted the states to provide services to a
broad range of current and potential recipients. Also during the 1960's, the
War on Poverty and Grand Society programs were changing the racial structure
of social services. Quadagno writes, "While the New Deal had excluded African
Americans, the War on Poverty would favor them. While the New Deal had conspired
with southern elite's to deny political and social rights to African Americans,
the War on Poverty would assimilate them into local politics, local job markets
and local housing markets." The number of families receiving aid grew from 803,000
in 1960 to 1.9 million in 1970 and then to just under 3 million in 1972. While
the numbers of people on welfare grew, so too did the number of welfare recipients
who began organizing under the banner of Welfare Rights. The National Welfare
Rights Organization was founded in 1966 by dozens of local groups that had already
been doing years of grassroots organizing in their communities. The welfare
rights movement was primarily lead and composed of mothers who were welfare
recipients.
Due to the number of people on welfare growing, the influx of Black women on
welfare, the growing power of the welfare rights movement, and the expanding
government programs to aid the poor, the situation led to a backlash by the
white male power structure that feared it was losing its ability to govern The
backlash focused on long held notions of welfare mothers, such as illegitimacy,
dependency, and immorality. However, the backlash in the 1960's began to associate
these concepts primarily with Black women, the Black family and the Black community
generally. The stigma of welfare and the corrupting effects of welfare on the
family became racialized. As ADC and then AFDC have always been programs benefiting
women and their children, the stigma has already been gendered. The social construction
of gender that defines women as dependent on men is continued to the social
construction of the welfare mother dependent on society.
An article written in 1965 for the New York Times Magazine reflects
the discourse shaping headlines and newspaper articles across the country. The
article explains, "We know that the damage to the infant takes place long before
he [sic] sees the dirt, the drunks, the drug addicts, the spilled garbage of
the slum; the damage takes place when the unavailable mother brings her child
home from the hospital and realizes she hates him for being alive." Also in
1965, the highly influential and controversial report by Daniel Moynihan, "The
Negro Family", was released. Moynihan argued that the underlying cause for the
rising welfare roles, the increased poverty, and the high rate of unemployment
in the Black community was the Black family. The families headed by single mothers,
in particular. He explained that the Black family had developed into a dysfunctional
state due to slavery. During slavery, Black men were unable to exercise patriarchal
power and maintained a general equality with women. Then as a result of job
discrimination, Black men were not able to perform the task of breadwinner for
their families. Black women became the head of households as they performed
the breadwinner role and the caretaker role. Black women, argued Moynihan, had
become powerful Black matriarchs that emasculated Black boys and failed to provide
proper role models for Black girls. The Black father's position as head of the
household had been so thoroughly undermined by the power of the Black mother,
that he often left his families as a failure.
What does Moynihan suggest doing about this situation? Ending job discrimination?
Creating a federally guaranteed annual family income to end poverty?
No. Moynihan points to the goal of restructuring the Black family. The father
must regain his position as head of the household. Black women should be discouraged
from paid work and stay at home with the children. Establishing male dominance
in the family was a prerequisite of social stability. During the turbulent period
of the 60's when the Black liberation movement is changing national politics
and the women's liberation movement is beginning to question the base assumptions
of a patriarchal society, Moynihan argues that social problems ranging from
poverty to lack of self confidence in Black men is the fault of the matriarchal
Black mother who exercises too much power. Moynihan's report was an attack on
the social movements of the 60s and an effort to reinforce white supremacist
and patriarchal discourses on Black people and women generally and Black women
in particular.
Moynihan also developed an argument that has gained wide spread currency and
is used consistently to describe the poor. Moynihan argued that the Black family
was a tangled web of pathologies. Drug addiction, self-hate, violence, lack
of a work ethic, dependency, out-of-wedlock, illegitimate babies and the teen
mothers who can't take care of themselves let alone a child. These pathologies
are the result of the breakdown of the Black family.
In response to these arguments Collins writes, "creating the controlling image
of the welfare mother and stigmatizing her as the cause of her own poverty and
that of African American communities shifts the angle of vision away from structural
sources of poverty and blames the victims themselves. The image of the welfare
mother thus provides ideological justification for the dominate group's interest
in limiting the fertility of Black mothers who are seen as producing too many
economically unproductive children."
Welfare Rights organizer Johnnie Tillman wrote an article for Ms. Magazine
in 1972 that challenged the popular image of welfare mothers. Her article titled,
"Welfare is a Women's Issue", reads: "There are a lot of lies that male society
tells about welfare mothers: that AFDC mothers are immoral, that AFDC mothers
are lazy, misuse their welfare checks, spend it all on booze and are stupid
and incompetent. If people are willing to believe these lies, it's partly because
these are just special versions of the lies that society tells about all women."
Throughout the 70's and 80's cutbacks on AFDC were made and the dominate discourse
on welfare continued to focus on pathologies or what was then termed the "culture
of poverty". The next big event in the history of welfare occurred in 1996.
President Clinton promised to "end welfare as we know it", and on August 22,
1996, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act was
passed into law. The welfare reform bill, as it came to be known, eliminated
AFDC and created a block grant for states to provide time-limited cash assistance
to families in poverty. The new block grant program's, Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (TANF), purpose is to "reduce dependency by promoting job
preparation, work and marriage. The block grants can also be used by the states
to fund efforts to reduce out-of-wedlock pregnancies and encourage the formation
and maintenance of two parent families." Highly controversial birth control
methods are being administered to welfare mothers, regardless of the high levels
of side effects and lack of testing on long-tern effects.
Furthermore, "States may use their TANF block grant allocation for any 'manner
reasonably calculated to accomplish the purpose of the TANF". As the TANF is
administered as a block grant, the states have "complete flexibility to determine
eligibility and benefit levels" which means that some of the options available
to the states are that they "may deny assistance to additional children born
or conceived while the parent is on welfare" and "may deny assistance to unmarried
teen parents and their children".
The welfare reform bill aims to remove families from welfare into employment
through job-training programs. Adults in families receiving assistance under
TANF are required to "participate in work activities after receiving assistance
for 24 months (subject to good clause exemptions by the state). Recipients must
be participating in community service within two months of receiving benefits
if they are not working." The welfare bill also provides cash bonuses to states
who have "high performance" in meeting the goals of reducing the numbers of
people on welfare. Such criteria for "high performance" does not consider the
numbers of people gainfully employed, out of poverty, or any other indicator
of the "quality of life" for people removed from welfare. There is also an Illegitimacy
Reduction Bonus Fund that rewards the five states with the "greatest success
in reducing out-of-wedlock births without increasing abortions".
During the debate over welfare reform the mainstream media presented a nearly
unanimous perspective that welfare had failed and needed to be seriously reformed.
The image of the welfare mother in the news was that of a Black teenager. In
Newsweek (12/94) journalist Jonathan Alter wrote, "Every threat to
the fabric of this country - from poverty to crime to homelessness - is connected
to out-of-wedlock teen pregnancy."
While less than 6 percent of AFDC recipients are under 20; only 1 percent goes
to people under 18 years of age. Regardless of how many teen mothers are actually
on welfare, the politicians and journalists used the image of the Black teen
mother to generate anger against welfare in public opinion. Diane Sawyer, on
her show "Prime Time Live" (02/95) asked a teenage mother on AFDC, "why should
they [taxpayers] pay for your mistake?" Newsweek (02/95) carried a story on
the "sexually irresponsible culture of poverty" and argued that we [morally
correct citizens] must use the television to send a powerful message as it "is
the only sustained communication our society has with the underclass."
The media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting did a study on
the welfare reform debates and the representation of welfare recipients. They
surveyed three months of welfare coverage in half a dozen of the most influential
news outlets: the New York Times, the Washington Post, ABC
News, PBS's "McNeil/Lehrer News Hour, Time and Newsweek. The
study looked to see who the media quoted, how they were quoted and what sources
were used in the reporting. Of sources whose gender could be identified 71%
(608 sources) were men. When welfare recipients are removed from the percentage,
the number of male sources is 77%. Reporters used current and former government
officials as sources more than any other group, making up 59% of the sources.
The single most quoted person during the period studied was Republican Rep.
Clay Shaw, chair of the House subcommittee that drafted the "Personal Responsibility
Act". In the New York Times Shaw described the welfare system as "pampering
the poor".
Welfare recipients made up 10 percent of the media's sources, however FAIR
found that they were generally quoted only when they reinforced popular myths
of welfare mothers and helped construct a perspective that viewed "guilty moms"
and "innocent children". FAIR found that the idea of success was strictly associated
with cutting welfare and not a decrease in the number of people living in poverty
and that similarly experts continually referred to "getting tough" on welfare.
While the actual number of teen mothers on AFDC is small, the study found that
when welfare recipients age was given in media reports they were generally 17,
18 and 19, thus reinforcing the image of teenage welfare mothers. One example
of how the media presented welfare and race was the cover piece on welfare in
US News & World Report (01/95) that had pictures of seven women, all
but one was a woman of color and most of them were Black. While white women
are the majority of AFDC recipients only one was pictured, and she was described
as "clinically depressed". The report produced by FAIR clearly demonstrates
how the media objectified welfare recipients in general and Black women on AFDC
in particular. The stereotypes and controlling images helped win public support
for the "Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act". "By articulating
a definition of poverty that associated it explicitly with illegitimacy, then
associated illegitimacy with race, the Right made it acceptable to express blatantly
racist concepts without shame." The media consistently put forward a paternalistic
message that all of this was "for your own good" regardless of how racist and
sexist it may be.
In a report to the United Nations about poverty in the United States, Special
Rapporteur Maurice Glele-Ahanhanzo wrote, this "new mythology provided the ideological
cannon fodder for the attack on the poor and people of color. That mythology
equates growth in poverty to growth in an underclass which is primarily Black,
Latino and female. This was the basis for the myth of the 'welfare queen'. The
increase in poverty is said to be the result of the growth of this sector of
the population, not economic factors."
Welfare Reform has been in effect now for nearly two years, and the measure
for success remains to be the decreased numbers of people receiving welfare.
A front page article of the Los Angeles Times (11/98), the success
of welfare reform is noted by the percentage of people off of welfare, not by
the number of people employed or living above the poverty line. As more and
more families become homeless and are pushed deeper into poverty, the politicians
and journalists cheer on about the great success of welfare reform. The connections
between poverty and the skyrocketing number of people in prisons is also avoided
in most discussions about welfare reform. The fact that women are the fastest
growing segment of the prison population should warrant an investigation into
this connection, but in the eyes of politicos and pundits who championed welfare
reform, as long as they aren't still on welfare seems to be the only fact that
matters.
However, along with the backlash against welfare and Black women is particular,
there has been a groundswell of welfare rights activism that is organized and
led by women. In 1992, the Women's Economic Agenda Project held the first ever
Poor Women's Convention under the title, "Under Attack, Fighting Back". Over
400 poor women participated. The National Welfare Rights Union was active during
the welfare reform debates, getting organizations like NOW to come out against
the welfare reform bill. With the passage of the bill in 96, groups like the
Kensington Welfare Rights Union have intensified their efforts. KWRU in the
summer of 98 went on an organizer tour to build their "Economic Human Rights
Campaign" and traveled in their Freedom from Unemployment, Hunger and Homelessness
Bus across the country. They stopped in dozens of cities to meet with local
poor people's groups and ended the tour at the United Nations where they presented
economic human rights violations under welfare reform along with a speech to
the general assembly on the struggle of poor people in the US. The KWRU is a
multiracial organization started by and led by mothers.
While it is crucial to examine the history of welfare and welfare reform discourse
from a Black Feminist perspective that places Black women at the center of interconnected
race, class and gender analysis. It is also imperative that we develop strategies
of resistance from a Black Feminist perspective as well. Such a perspective
would include the importance of self-definition and moving from objectivity
to subjectivity.
As Collins writes, "challenging controlling images and replacing them with
a Black women's standpoint is an essential component of resisting systems of
race, gender and class oppression." The process of self-definition involves
not only rejecting social constructions of racial and gender inferiority, but
also reclaiming history and knowledge that challenges white supremacy, patriarchy,
and economic inequality. Liberatory knowledge for Black women and other oppressed
groups is what Collins refers to as subjugated knowledge.
"Suppressing the knowledge produced by any oppressed group makes it easier
for dominant groups to rule because the seeming absence of an independent consciousness
in the oppressed can be taken to mean that subordinated groups willingly collaborate
in their own victimization," Collins explains. The image of the welfare mother
is one of a powerless, irresponsible woman who not only willingly collaborates
in her own victimization but has produced a culture of poverty based on that
victimization. Subjugated knowledge is information, ideas, and history that
has been buried, obscured or invalidated by discourses that serve power and
privilege. The images of welfare mothers occupy the public debate not the history
of how welfare developed or how race and gender have historically discriminated
and kept Black women down. Reclaiming subjugated knowledge is one of the key
practices of Black feminist thought as Collins outlines it and of radical political
analysis that I employ throughout this essay. These political projects aim to
not only recover lost history of Black women and other oppressed groups but
also to reconceptualize history through an interconnected analysis or race,
class and gender. This paper aims to reconceptualize welfare, welfare reform
and images of welfare mothers so that welfare recipients can continue to move
from being objects in this debate to become subjects shaping this debate. Welfare
rights activists who are not also recipients can aid in this project by shifting
the center of our analysis so that welfare recipients, their knowledge claims
and their strategies inform and guide our work.
While writing this paper in December of 1998, welfare rights activists occupied
the Governor of Massachusetts' lobby in the Capital Building. The Governor was
set to begin implementing welfare reform the next day and the activists committed
non-violent civil disobedience to demand a moratorium on welfare reform.
Footnotes
- Laura Flanders with Janine Jackson and Dan Shadoan. Media Lies: Media, Public
Opinion and Welfare from For Crying Out Loud: women's poverty in the United
States ed. by Diane Dujon and Ann Withorn, page 30. South End Press,
1996.
- ibid.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back: Women and Welfare in
the United States, page 59. Monthly Review Press, 1996.
- Ibid., page 59. Although it should be noted that the status of widow was
generally more respected then a single-mother headed family caused by separation
or never married mothers, and so many claimed they were widows to escape stigma.
- Ibid., page 60. Many of the women reformers hoped that the pension would
help stop women from entering the paid labor market.
- Ibid., page 60. While the program existed in all but two states, it had
not necessary been adopted in every county of the states which had adopted
the Mother's Pension.
- Ibid., page 60.
- Quoted by Patricia Hill Collins. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge,
Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment, page 68. Routledge, 1990.
- Ibid., 68.
- Ibid., 68.
- Ibid., 69. Collins book has become a contemporary classic and has profoundly
influenced my thinking on the subjects of Black women as mothers, controlling
images of welfare mother and Black women's activism is this paper.
- Ibid., 69.
- Ibid., 69.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 61.
- Ibid., page 16.
- The social welfare programs in the industrialized nations of Europe were
created in response to popular protest and resistance amongst the working
classes of these nations. These programs were not created out of the benevolence
of rulers for their people, but out of fear of losing their ability to rule
altogether. Race relations and the role of white supremacy in dividing the
working classes of the United States significantly weakened the labor movements
efforts to win social welfare programs.
- Ibid., page 16. This paragraph is taken entirely form Abramovitz. Social
Security and Unemployment Insurance currently cover more than 95% of the population
writes Abramovitz, and they both maintain strong political support from well
organized constituencies.
- Jill Quadagno. The Color of Welfare: How Racism Undermined the War
on Poverty, page 20-24.
- Ibid., page 157.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, pages 62-64.
- Jill Quadagno. The Color of Welfare, page 119.
- Ibid., page 20-24.
- Most Black men and many white women were also excluded from these federal
entitlement programs, however this paper puts Black women at the center of
analysis. What is of particular importance is that analysis of and by Black
women routinely seeks to develop interconnected theories and strategies that
include the oppression and exploitation of Black men and white women and seek
social change through collective struggles challenging inequality that effects
the majority of society.
- Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought, page 6.
- Ibid., page 6.
- Ibid., page 6.
- While this discussion has focused on Southern leaders, economic and political
leaders in the North also exercise these practices as the Civil Rights movement
of the 60's clearly brought to light. Our analysis should be far-reaching
and look to understand race, class and gender as key organizing principles
of the United States as a whole.
- Patricia Collins, Black Feminist Thought, page 7.
- Ibid., page 7. This is but one of many passages that clearly demonstrates
Collins status as a social science superstar.
- Ibid., page 73.
- This is very much just a working definition, as I don't think I've come
across any clear definition of gendering meaning as I have read on racialized
meaning.
- Mimi Abramovitz, Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 64. Jill Quadagno,
The Color of Welfare, pages 20-24.
- Darlene Clark Hines. Rape and the Inner Lives of Black Women in the
Middle West: Preliminary Thoughts on the Culture of Dissemblance. Hines
present a Black feminist analysis of why women moved to the North during this
period of time and demonstrates how Black women exercised their own agency
in the "acquisition of personal autonomy and economic liberation".
- Nancy Naples. Grassroots Warriors: Activist Mothering, Community Work
and the War on Poverty, pages 40-60.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, pages 67-72.
- Ibid., pages 67-72.
- Ibid., page 74.
- Jill Quadagno. The Color of Welfare, page 31. The War on Poverty
was created by the government because of pressure from protest movements,
and Quadagno goes on latter in her book to explain the process by which the
government dismantled many of the gains made during the War on Poverty.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 73.
- Nancy Naples. Grassroots Warriors. Mimi Abramovitz. Under
Attack, Fighting Back, page 74.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 81.
- Patricia Collins. Black Feminist Thought, page 77.
- Mimi Abramovitz, Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 80. 44. Legislative
Summary, analysis of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996. Prepared by the National Governors' Association, National Conference
of State Legislatures and the American Public Welfare Association. The summary
also states that the bill "also makes far-reaching changes to child care,
the Food Stamps Program, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) for children,
benefits for legal immigrants and the Child Support Enforcement program.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- Laura Flanders. Media Lies: Media, Public Opinion and Welfare,
p. 29.
- Ibid., p. 29.
- Ibid., p. 30.
- Ibid., p. 30.
- Ibid., p. 31.
- Ibid., p. 31.
- Ibid., p. 32
- Ibid., p. 34.
- Lucy Williams. "The Public Eye", Political Research Associates Newsletter,
Fall/Winter, 1996.
- African American Human Rights Foundation report to Special Rapporteur,
12 October 1994.
- Melissa Healy. "Welfare Cuts Get Tougher With Success", Los Angeles
Times, Nov. 28, 1998.
- Mimi Abramovitz. Under Attack, Fighting Back, page 134.
- Patricia Collins. Black Feminist Thought, page 104.
- When welfare recipients move from objects to subjects in this debate it
effects all of us. I think of the quote from James Baldwin, "if I am not what
you thought I was, you are not what you think you are". As I challenge images
of Black women on welfare, I as a white male also seek to challenge images
of whiteness and maleness that hold up this system of inequality.
- From the Boston Globe, November 30th, 1998. 30 people were arrested.
last updated: December 25, 2004
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