黑人家庭结构变化:对福利依赖的影响

Changes in Black Family Structure: Implications for Welfare Dependency

American Economic Review · 1983
被引 37
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

分析美国黑人家庭中女性户主比例从1965年不到25%升至1980年超过40%的现象,探讨其对福利依赖的影响,并对比白人家庭的变化。

Abstract

Female headship among black families long has been more pronounced in the United States in comparison with other ethnic groups. E. Franklin Frazier's classic study of the black family in the 1930's placed a distinct emphasis on the disproportionately high number of urban Negro families with women heads. Frazier's work suggested that throughout the pre-World War II period almost one-quarter of black families were headed by women. In the mid-1960's, female headship among black families was the subject of Johnson Administration policy planner Daniel Moynihan's notorious characterization of the black family as enmeshed in a tangle of pathology. But while the subsequent debate between disciples of Moynihan's pathology-disorganization perspective and the proponents of the strength-resiliency perspective raged, the proportion of black families with female heads has risen markedly. The proportion climbed from slightly less than 25 percent in 1965 to an astonishing more than 40 percent by 1980. Female headship also has grown among white families, but the rate of increase has not approached that among blacks. Between 1965 and 1980, the percent of white female-headed families rose from 9 percent to close to 12 percent.

黑人家庭结构女性户主家庭福利依赖家庭病理论