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Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Public Policy
Job Stability And Wage Progression Patterns Among Early Tanf Leavers, Steven G. Anderson, Anthony P. Halter, George Julnes, Richard Schuldt
Job Stability And Wage Progression Patterns Among Early Tanf Leavers, Steven G. Anderson, Anthony P. Halter, George Julnes, Richard Schuldt
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
This article reports on first-year employment experiences of a randomly selected sample of 213 Illinois TANF leavers. Aggregate employment levels were 70 percent at exit, and leavers typically generated earnings from a single full-time job. However, employment often was unstable, so that only about one-fourth of leavers had the same job both at exit and when interviewed 10-11 months later. Employment instability resulted from the marginal or temporary nature of many jobs, as well as employment barriers such as health problems and lack of day care. Average wage levels easily exceeded the minimum wage and grew during the first year …
Agent Provocateurs In The Mideast, Ibpp Editor
Agent Provocateurs In The Mideast, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes examples of agent provocateurs in the context of conflict between Israel and the Palestinian National Authority (PNA.)
The Political Psychology Of Abortion: Some Implications Of Free Choice, Ibpp Editor
The Political Psychology Of Abortion: Some Implications Of Free Choice, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes some logical implications of a "free choice" position on abortion public policy.
Transboundary Areas And Peace: Virtual Peace And Virtual Reality In The 21st Century, Ibpp Editor
Transboundary Areas And Peace: Virtual Peace And Virtual Reality In The 21st Century, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article outlines a conceptual structure for developing knowledge and assessing the impact that transboundary areas may have on Issues of war and peace. This structure is based on the constructs of virtual peace and virtual reality. Also, this structure can be used by psychologists and other researchers, political leaders and policymakers, and citizens throughout the world committed to a world with more peace and less war.
Tanf Policy Implementation: The Invisible Barrier, Roberta Rehner Iversen
Tanf Policy Implementation: The Invisible Barrier, Roberta Rehner Iversen
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Barriers to participation in welfare-to-work programs are generally described in terms of human and social capital. Findings from case examination of four Philadelphia-areaw elfare-to-work programs under TANF suggest that theory about policy implementation is more applicable. Faulty policy logic, organizational and personnel incompetence, and inadequate coordination between and within funding, referral, program, and employer organizations regularly resulted in delayed program start-ups and strained program operations. Generally invisible and absent from research attention, these implementation delays and strains impeded program staff efforts and harmed TANF recipients. States' 24-month time limit policies are a critical target for advocacy efforts.
Welcome Address, J. O. Sanusi
Welcome Address, J. O. Sanusi
Bullion
Welcome Address presented by the formal Central Bank Governor, Mr. J. O. Sanusi. The seminar was the sixth of its kind and collaborated with inter agencies with a view to examines the Federal Government Budget for the year 2000.
Editor's Note, Padraig O'Malley
Editor's Note, Padraig O'Malley
New England Journal of Public Policy
We are pleased to bring you the first issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy in the new century. We rejoice that at the stroke of midnight on December 31, 1999, the planet did not implode, meteors did not shower us with the debris of their displeasure with us earthlings, aircraft did not fall out of the sky, catastrophic convulsions in our ecosystems did not engulf us, telecommunication systems functioned with indifferent insouciance to the inner terrors of our crippled imaginations. The world, one minute after January 1, 2000, was yawningly the same as one minute before.
Whether …
Journalism And Unconscious Racism: A Perspective From South Africa, Ibpp Editor
Journalism And Unconscious Racism: A Perspective From South Africa, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article describes psychological problems in accurately identifying racism in public policy discourse.
Michael Warner's "The Trouble With Normal: Sex, Politics, And The Ethics Of Queer Life": Implications For Sex And Security, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article continues a series of IBPP articles on sex and security by exploring the implications of a new book on the appropriateness of public policy that bears on sexuality.
How Tuberculosis Threatens Supporters And Opponents Of Racial Profiling, Ibpp Editor
How Tuberculosis Threatens Supporters And Opponents Of Racial Profiling, Ibpp Editor
International Bulletin of Political Psychology
This article explores peculiarities of logic and reason among supporters and opponents of racial profiling as a tool of developing and implementing public policy.