Poor People's Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail

Regular price $ 16.75

by Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward

Vintage Paperbacks

1978, paperback

SKU: 9780394726977

 

Have the poor fared best by participating in conventional electoral politics or by engaging in mass defiance and disruption? The authors of the classic Regulating The Poor assess the successes and failures of these two strategies as they examine, in this provocative study, four protest movements of lower-class groups in 20th century America:
-- The mobilization of the unemployed during the Great Depression that gave rise to the Workers' Alliance of America
-- The industrial strikes that resulted in the formation of the CIO
-- The Southern Civil Rights Movement
-- The movement of welfare recipients led by the National Welfare Rights Organization.

Reviews:

"...enormously instructive." -- E.J. Hobsbawm, New York Review of Books

"This beautifully written book is the most exciting and important political study in years." -- S. M. Miller, Department of Sociology, Boston University.

"Of the first importance; it is bound to have a wide and various influence; and it is disturbing." -- Jack Beatty, "The Nation"