冷战时期美国的贫困:一个没有名字的问题?1950年代和1960年代贫困专家的隐形网络

Poverty in Cold War America: A Problem That Has No Name? The Invisible Network of Poverty Experts in the 1950s and 1960s

History of Political Economy · 2010
被引 5
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

分析了1963-1968年肯尼迪和约翰逊政府中发起“向贫困宣战”的社会专家网络,揭示他们在定义贫困中的关键作用及其最终失败。

Abstract

This essay analyzes the network of social experts who launched the War on Poverty in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations from 1963 to 1968. If they are often neglected in historical accounts, which are focused on public intellectuals and presidential advisers, these experts played a major role in the process of defining poverty in the affluent society. From World War II to the 1960s, their work remained largely invisible since it was made in bureaucratic and academic circles. If experts had free rein to carry out research on income distribution and the establishment of a poverty line, they proved to be less powerful when poverty gained national and political attention. Paradoxically, the War on Poverty was a pyrrhic victory for this generation of experts, who tried to reinvigorate the liberal social contract of the postwar years in the United States.

贫困专家网络贫困线向贫困宣战冷战时期美国