Table of Contents | Previous | Next |
References and Bibliography
Acs, Gregory, Katherin Ross Phillips, and Daniel McKenzie. October 2000. On the Bottom Rung: A Profile of American Low-Income Working Families. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Acs, Gregory, Katherin Ross Phillips, and Daniel McKenzie. 2001. “Playing by the Rules.” In Rich-ard Kazis and Marc Miller (eds.), Low-Wage Workers in the New Economy. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Alssid, Julian, David Gruber, Davis Jenkins, Christopher Mazzeo, Brandon Roberts, and Regina Stanback-Stroud. 2002. Building a Career Pathways System: Promising Practices in Community College-Centered Workforce Development. Washington, DC: Workforce Strategy Center.
Anderson, Jacqueline, Jennifer Miller, and Johannes Bos. January 2002. “Job Retention and Advancement Services for CalWORKs Participants: Initial Survey of County Practices.” California Policy Research Center Brief. Vol. 14, No. 1. Berkeley: California Policy Research Center.
Berlin, Gordon. March 2000. Encouraging Work, Reducing Poverty: The Impact of Work Incentive Programs. New York: MDRC.
Bernstein, Jared, and Heidi Hartmann. 1999. The Low-Wage Labor Market: Challenges and Opportunities for Economic Self-Sufficiency. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.
Berube, Alan. 2003. Rewarding Work Through the Tax Code: The Power and Potential of the Earned Income Tax Credit in 27 Cities and Rural Areas. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.
Berube, Alan, Ann Kim, Benjamin Foreman, and Megan Burns. 2002. The Price of Paying Taxes: How Tax Preparation and Refund Loan Fees Erode the Benefits of the EITC. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.
Bloom, Dan, Jacqueline Anderson, Melissa Wavelet, Karen N. Gardiner, and Michael E. Fishman. February 2002. New Strategies to Promote Stable Employment and Career Progression: An Introduction to the Employment Retention and Advancement Project. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families.
Bosworth, Brian, and Victoria Choitz. 2002. Held Back: How Student Aid Programs Fail Working Adults. Belmont, MA: Futureworks.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. Winter 2001-2002. Occupational Outlook Quarterly 45, 4. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor. Website: http://stats.bls.gov/opub/ooq/2001/winter/art04.htm.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. February 2002. Employment Situation Summary. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor. Web site: http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. March 2002. Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey. Washington, DC: U.S Department of Labor. Website: http://www.stats.bls.gov.
California Budget Project. 2000. Are Employer Tax Credits the Most Effect Way to Expand Health Coverage for California’s Uninsured? Sacramento: California Budget Project. Website: www.cbp.org/2000/qh000518.html.
Cancian, Maria, and Daniel R. Meyer. 1997. “Work After Welfare: Women’s Work Effort, Occupation, and Economic Well-Being.” Social Work Research 24, 2: 69-86. Washington, DC: National Association for Social Workers.
Carnevale, Anthony P., and Donna M. Desrochers. 1997. Getting Down to Business: Matching Welfare Recipients’ Skills to Jobs That Train. Princeton, NJ: Educational Testing Service.
Carnevale, Anthony P., and Donna M. Desrochers. 2002. The Missing Middle: Aligning Education and the Knowledge Economy. Princeton, NJ: Educational Testing Service.
Carnevale, Anthony P., and Stephen J. Rose. 2001. “Low-Earners: Who Are They? Do They Have a Way Out?” In Richard Kazis and Mark S. Miller (eds.), Low-Wage Workers in the New Economy. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Carr, James H., and Jenny Schuetz. 2001. Financial Services in Distressed Communities: Framing the Issue, Finding Solutions. Washington, DC: Fannie Mae Foundation.
Cunnyngham, Karen. June 2002. Trends in Food Stamp Program Participation Rates 1994-2000: Final Report. Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Davidoff, Amy, Bowen Garrett, and Alshadye Yemane. 2000. Medicaid Eligibility, Takeup, Insurance Coverage, and Health Care Access and Use Before and After Welfare Reform: National Changes from 1994 to 1997. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Dion, M. Robin, and LaDonna Pavetti. March 2000. Access To and Participation In Medicaid and the Food Stamp Program: A Review of the Recent Literature. Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Dubay, Lisa, Genevieve Kenney, and Jennifer Haley. March 2002. Children’s Participation in Medicaid and SCHIP: Early in the SCHIP Era. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Employment and Training Administration. 1998. The Workforce Investment Act of 1998. Washing-ton, DC: U.S. Department of Labor. Website: http://www.doleta.gov/usworkforce/plaintext.pdf.
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. 2001. Building Assets for Low-Income Americans: Individual Development Accounts (IDAs). Kansas City, MO: Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.
Fein, David J., Erik Beecrift, William Hamilton, Wang S. Lee, Pamela A. Holcomb, Terri S. Thopson, and Caroline E. Ratcliffe. 1998. The Indiana Welfare Reform Evaluation: Program Implementation and Economic Impacts After Two Years. Bethesda, MD: Abt Associates Inc.; Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Fiscal Survey of States. 2003. Washington, DC: National Governors Association and the National Association of State Budget Officers.
Fishman, Michael, and Harold Beebout. December 2001. Supports for Working Families: A New Approach. Baltimore: Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Fitzgerald, Joan, and Virginia Carlson. 2000. “Ladders to a Better Life.” American Prospect 11: 54-61.
Food and Nutrition Service. 2001. The Decline in Food Stamp Participation: A Report to Congress. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Foster-Bey, John, and Lynette Rawlings. 2002. Can Targeting Industries Improve Earnings for Welfare Recipients Moving from Welfare to Work? Preliminary Findings. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Garrett, Bowen, and John Holahan. 2000. Welfare Leavers, Medicaid Coverage, and Private Health Insurance. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
General Accounting Office. December 2001. Earned Income Tax Credit Eligibility and Participation. GAO-02-290R. Washington, DC: U.S. General Accounting Office.
Gladden, Tricia, and Christopher Taber. July 2000. “Wage Progression Among Less Skilled Workers.” In R. Blank and D. Card (eds.), Finding Jobs: Work and Welfare Reform. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Golonka, Susan, and Lisa Matus-Grossman. 2001. Opening Doors: Expanding Educational Opportunities for Low-Income Workers. New York: MDRC.
Greenberger, Debbie, and Robert Anslemi. 2003. Making Work Pay: How to Design and Implement Work Supports to Improve Family and Child Well-Being and Reduce Poverty. New York: MDRC.
Haveman, Robert. 2002. “When Work Alone Is Not Enough.” La Follette Policy Report 13, 2: 1-2. Madison, WI: Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs.
Hecker, Daniel. 2001. “Occupational Employment Projections to 2010.” Monthly Labor Review 124, 11.
Hershey, Alan, and LaDonna Pavetti. 1997. “Turning Job Finders into Job Keepers.” The Future of Children: Welfare to Work 7, 1. Los Altos, CA: Center for the Future of Children, David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
Heymann, Jody. 2000. The Widening Gap. New York: Basic Books.
Heymann, Jody, Reneé Boynton-Jarrett, Patricia Carter, James T. Bond, and Ellen Galinsky. 2002. Work-Family Issues and Low-Income Families. New York: Ford Foundation.
Isaacs, Julia B., and Matthew R. Lyon. 2000. A Cross-State Examination of Families Leaving Welfare: Findings from the ASPE-Funded Leavers Studies. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.
Jensen, Martin. 1998. Summary of the Workforce Investment Act. Washington, DC: NGA Center for Best Practices. Website: http://www.nga.org/center/divisions/1,1188,C_ISSUE_BRIEF^D_1758,00.html.
Kaye, Kelleen, and Demetra Nightingale (eds.). December 1999. The Low-Wage Labor Market: Challenges and Opportunities for Economic Self-Sufficiency. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Lane, Julia. 1999. The Role of Turnover in the Low-Wage Labor Market. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.
Lerman, Robert, and Felicity Skidmore. August 1999. Helping Low-Wage Workers: Policies for the Future. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Matus-Grossman, Lisa, and Susan Gooden. November 2001. Opening Doors to Earning Credentials: Impressions of Community College Access and Retention from Low-Wage Workers. New York: MDRC.
Matus-Grossman, Lisa, and Susan Gooden with Melissa Wavelet, Melisa Diaz, and Reishma Seu-persad. 2002. Opening Doors: Students’ Perspectives on Juggling Work, Family, and College. New York: MDRC.
Michalopoulos, Charles. 2001. “Sustained Employment and Earnings Growth: New Experimental Evidence on Earnings Supplements and Pre-Employment Services.” In Richard Kazis and Marc Miller (eds.), Low-Wage Workers in the New Economy. Washington, DC: Urban Institute.
Nightingale, Demetra Smith, Nancy Pindus, and John Trutko. August 2002. The Implementation of the Welfare-to-Work Grants Program. Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., and Urban Institute.
O’Brien, Doug, Kimberly Prendergast, Eleanor Thompson, Marcus Fruchter, and Haley Torres Al-deen. August 2000. The Red Tape Divide: State-by-State Review of Food Stamp Applications. Chicago: America’s Second Harvest.
Palladino, Scott. 2000. Using State Tax Policy to Assist Low-Income Families. Washington, DC: NGA Center for Best Practices.
Parrott, Sharon. 1998. Welfare Recipients Who Find Jobs: What Do We Know About Their Employment and Earnings? Washington, DC: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Parrott, Sharon, David Super, and Stacy Dean. 2004. Aligning Policies and Procedures in Benefit Programs: An Analysis of the Opportunities and Challenges Under Current Federal Laws and Regulations. Washington, DC: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Patel, Nisha, Mark Greenberg, Steve Savner, and Vicki Turetsky. 2002. Making Ends Meet: Six Programs That Help Working Families and Employers. Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy.
Pille, Mary. 2002. Strategic Advantage: Taming Turnover. Peoria, IL: Workforce Network. Website: http://www.icecentricnews.com/workforce/e_article000091927.cfm.
Poppe, Nan, Julie Strawn, and Karin Martinson. 2003. “Whose Job Is It? Creating Opportunities for Advancement.” In Robert P. Giloth (ed.), Workforce Intermediaries in the 21st Century. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Rangarajan, Anu. 1998. Keeping Welfare Recipients Employed: A Guide for States Designing Job Retention Services. Princeton, NJ: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Rangarajan, Anu, Peter Schochet, and Dexter Chu. 1998. Employment Experiences of Welfare Recipients Who Find Jobs: Is Targeting Possible? Princeton, NJ: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Relave, Nanette. 2001. Using Case Management to Change the Front Lines of Welfare Service Delivery. Washington, DC: Finance Project.
Richer, Elise. 2003. The Safety “Net”: Online Access to Benefits for Working Families. Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy.
Richer, Elise, Steve Savner, and Mark Greenberg. November 2001. Frequently Asked Questions About Working Welfare Leavers. Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy.
Roberts, Brandon. 2002. Working Poor Families: A State-Level Assessment of Conditions and Policies Encouraging Economic Self-Sufficiency. Chevy Chase, MD: Brandon Roberts and Associates.
Scholz, John Karl. 1994. “The Earned Income Tax Credit: Participation, Compliance, and Antipoverty Effectiveness.” National Tax Journal 48: 64-85. Washington, DC: National Tax Association.
Strawn, Julie, and Karin Martinson. 2000. Steady Work and Better Jobs: How to Help Income Parents Sustain Employment and Advance in the Workforce. New York: MDRC.
| Table of Contents | Previous | Next |

