The reach of decentralized poverty governance: Race, politics, and framing poverty in community action agency mission statements
Emily W. Kane
Abstract:The literature on decentralized public assistance programs in the United States documents racialized, partisan poverty governance founded on paternalism and individualistic frameworks. This article extends that literature to consider such frameworks in a unique site of poverty governance, Community Action Agencies (CAAs). Established during the War on Poverty in the 1960's, CAAs emphasized “maximum feasible participation” from low‐income citizens, aspiring to participatory models and funding structures that so… Show more
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