Caring for America: Home Health Workers in the Shadow of the Welfare State

Caring for America: Home Health Workers in the Shadow of the Welfare State

by EileenBoris (Author), JenniferKlein (Author)

Synopsis

Through a sweeping analytical narrative, from the Great Depression of the 1930s to the Great Recession of today, Caring for America shows how law and social policy shaped home care into a low-wage job, stigmatized as part of public welfare, primarily funded through Medicaid, and relegated to the bottom of the medical hierarchy. Care work became a job for African American and immigrant women that kept them in poverty, while providing independence from institutionalization for needy elderly and disabled people. But while the state organized home care, it did not do so without eliciting contestation and confrontation from the citizens themselves who gave and received it. Authors Eileen Boris and Jennifer Klein trace the intertwined, sometimes conflicting search of care providers and receivers for dignity, self-determination, security, and personal and social worth. This book highlights social movements of senior citizens for disability rights and independent living, the civil rights organizing of women on welfare and domestic workers, the battles of public sector unions, and the unionization of health and service workers. It rethinks the history of the American welfare state from the perspective of care work, all the while re-examining the strategies of the U.S. labor movement in terms of a growing care work economy. An unprecedented study, Caring for America serves as a definitive historical account of how public policy has impacted major modern movements and trends in class, race, and gender politics in the United States.

$95.19

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: OUP USA
Published: May 2012

ISBN 10: 0195329112
ISBN 13: 9780195329117

Media Reviews
Eileen Boris and Jennifer Klein go beyond an exploration of the history of a profession to offer perspective on the politics and values that defined health care in the twentieth-century United States. * Jessica L. Adler, Enterprise & Society *
The athors have skillfully and forcefully demonstrated that if a society actually values caring, then we need to attend to those who care as much as to those who are cared for. * Andrew Morris, Journal of American Studies *
Author Bio
Eileen Boris is Professor of History and Women's Studies at UC-Santa Barbara. Jennifer Klein is Assistant Professor of History at Yale University