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Care and Equality: Inventing a New Family Politics
 
 
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Care and Equality: Inventing a New Family Politics (Paperback)

by Mona Harrington (Author) "YEARS NOW AFTER THE EVENT, I can still see Zoe Baird leaning toward the microphone before the Senate Judiciary Committee, eyes puffy, mouth tight, trying..." (more)
Key Phrases: Bill Clinton, White House, United States (more...)
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The enormous shift of American women from full-time, unpaid homemakers to members of the paid workforce, Mona Harrington argues, reveals the extent to which the care of the American family once rested on their shoulders--and she believes that this societal change, with its benefits and problems, requires correspondingly large changes in public policy. Care and Equality is a clear-eyed, intelligent assessment of the social policies of the Clinton era and why their proponents have been unable to bring about healthy policy reform. Harrington, inspired by her strong belief in the liberal movement's capacity to effect positive change, outlines her own agenda: "To assure good care to all members of the society should become a primary principle of our common life," she writes, "along with the assurance of liberty, equality and justice." Care and Equality is an enlightening read for policymakers and electorate both. --Maria Dolan --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal
"In spite of the fact that most American women are in the paid workforce, we have not taken full account of what that means. We are operating as if they were still at home much of the time taking care of their families," writes Harrington in this book, which examines the collapsing care system and suggests solutions for establishing a new one. Harrington, an attorney and author (Women Lawyers, LJ 1/94), believes that women are unlikely to return home to do care work, for reasons of both economics and equality. Therefore, she says, care must be adopted as a national priority. After evaluating liberal positions on family and care issues, Harrington urges liberals to promote policies that provide meaningful support for care systems and explore new responses to the continuing collapse of those systems. This thorough and thoughtful look at the issues is strongly slanted toward liberal, government-centered solutions. An optional choice for academic political science collections.AJill Ortner, SILS, SUNY at Buffalo
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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  Inside This Book
Citations: This book cites 41 books | 33 books that cite this book
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Key Phrases - CAPs: Bill Clinton, White House, United States, President Clinton, Social Security (more)
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
YEARS NOW AFTER THE EVENT, I can still see Zoe Baird leaning toward the microphone before the Senate Judiciary Committee, eyes puffy, mouth tight, trying to be understood, explaining again and again why she had hired illegal aliens as nanny and chauffeur, and why she had not paid Social Security taxes on them, while she worked in the top managerial ranks of the Aetna Insurance Company-and why this should not bar her appointments to the office of attorney general. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Bill Clinton, White House, United States, President Clinton, Social Security, Supreme Court, Senator Biden, George Bush, Hillary Clinton, The Citadel, Air Force, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Lani Guinier, Paula Jones, The Problem of Private Authority, Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas, Lisa Dodson, New York Times, Soviet Union
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