skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Thursday, June 18, 2009
10 Important Questions About Child Poverty
The National Center for Children in Poverty has developed a great new resource addressing the "frequently asked questions" about poverty. From "What does it mean to experience poverty?" to "What can be done to increase economic security for America's children and families?" this document provides a user-friendly summary of the current research. For policies to reduce child poverty.
Labels:
Family Economic Success,
Poverty
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Contributors
Search This Blog
Labels
- Family Economic Success (147)
- Child Well-being (123)
- Poverty (97)
- Early Care and Education (89)
- Data (71)
- State Budgets (71)
- Child Welfare (62)
- Federal Budget (60)
- Results (55)
- Education (53)
- Stimulus (48)
- Foster Care (47)
- Racial Equity (47)
- Policymakers (43)
- Juvenile Detention (41)
- Job Training (30)
- Ensuring Children are Healthy and Prepared to Succeed in School (29)
- Food Stamps (28)
- Healthy Children (26)
- Home Foreclosures (15)
- Medicaid (15)
- Partnerships (11)
- Low-income (10)
- Affordable Housing (8)
- SNAP (8)
- Affordable Care Act (6)
- Guest Blogger (6)
- Improve Early Grade-Level Reading (6)
- Reintegration of Ex-Offenders (6)
- Courts (5)
- Home Visiting (5)
- Sequester (5)
- mental health (4)
- Census (3)
- EITC (3)
- Health Equity (3)
- Higher Education (3)
- Income inequality (3)
- TANF (3)
- Transitioning Youth (3)
- Video (3)
- health insurance (3)
- juvenile justice (3)
- Collaboration (2)
- Disparities in Health Care (2)
- Minimum wage (2)
- Teen Pregnancy (2)
- immigration (2)
- place-based initiatives (2)
- who pays (2)
- Arizona v. United States (1)
- Black male education (1)
- Black men going to college (1)
- Buffett Rule (1)
- Child Tax Credit (1)
- Criminal Justice (1)
- DMC (1)
- Introduction to Website (1)
- Mexican migration (1)
- Minority Health Month (1)
- NIH Minority Health Promotion Day (1)
- Navigator Program (1)
- Promise Neighborhoods (1)
- SOTU (1)
- Strengthening Families (1)
- Substance Abuse (1)
- Success Stories (1)
- asset tests (1)
- benefits of immigrant integration (1)
- http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif (1)
- immigrant demographic (1)
- just tax (1)
- progressive tax (1)
- regressive tax (1)
- social security (1)
- solitary confinement (1)
- tax policy (1)
- tax returns (1)
- unemployment insurance (1)
- welcome (1)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(215)
-
▼
June
(19)
- A New Paper on Defining "What Works"
- How Policymakers Can Work with Foundations to Redu...
- Race and the Recession
- The Effects of Foreclosures on Families, and Solut...
- New Resource for State Policymakers on Helping Gra...
- North Carolina Takes JobsNOW Online
- Governor Patrick Engages Cititzens in Solving the ...
- 10 Important Questions About Child Poverty
- Improving Preschool Even in Tough Economic Times
- A New Look at Family Structure, Income and Outcomes
- Tax Relief for Working Parents
- Latino Youth and the Failure of Justice
- 100 Voices/100 Days- How Are Children Doing?
- Two New Resources on Early Childhood for State Pol...
- Child Care Subsidies have Multiple Benefits for Pa...
- Public Sector Results-based Innovation, A Critical...
- Recession-induced Child Poverty Can Be Enduring
- How States Can Use Automation to Increase Health C...
- Stimulus Funding Working, At Least in Two States
-
▼
June
(19)
No comments:
Post a Comment