Blogs from Jean Hardisty - ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř /WCW-Blog-Bloggers/Authors/Jhardisty Thu, 26 Jun 2025 03:48:28 -0400 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management en-gb A Case of Structural Racism /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-case-of-structural-racism /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-case-of-structural-racism

For five years, from 2008 until 2013, I studied how Mississippi implements its child care certificates for low-income women who received the certificates as a welfare benefit. I brought to the work a racial lens and decades of studying the political right as a movement. I found a profound impact of both race and right-wing politics in my study of the Mississippi welfare bureaucracy and how low-income women and their children are treated. It has been a challenging and enlightening five years of travel, reading, conducting interviews, and mining historical and contemporary narratives. Although Mississippi is majority white (60.6 % vs. 37.2 % Black in 2008), its poor are disproportionately African American (55% of low income households). Its overall poverty rate is 28%. Black people’s median earnings in Mississippi are about $10,000 less than whites. Approximately 13.9 % of children live below half of the poverty level, the highest percentage in...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 11 Apr 2014 09:41:42 -0400
Celebrating Women's Equality Day /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Celebrating-women-s-equality-day /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Celebrating-women-s-equality-day August 26, Women’s Equality Day, always raises mixed feelings for me. I can join in the spirit of celebration over how far women have come from the days when my graduate school professor announced in class that if the political science department ever hired a woman, he would leave. When I was told I could not change my name from my married name to my “maiden” name; when flight attendants were all women who had passed an “attractiveness” test; and domestic workers had no rights to fair pay nor protection from assault and sexual harassment. And, of course, I remain grateful to Rep. Bella Abzug (D-NY), who almost single-handedly pushed the creation of “Women’s Equality Day” through Congress in 1971. The date was selected to commemorate the 1920 passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, granting women the right to vote (though a meaningful extension of this right for African...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 20 Aug 2013 09:17:29 -0400