David Stoesz: 5 books

Book cover of Quixote's Ghost

Quixote's Ghost

The Right, the Liberati, and the Future of Social Policy

by David Stoesz
Language: English
Release Date: July 14, 2005

American social policy, writes David Stoesz, is currently experiencing an alarming paradigm shift. Quixote's Ghost, a provocative new analysis of the ideological fight for control of American social welfare policy, demonstrates how the Right pirated the pragmatism championed by the Left since the...
Book cover of The Dynamic Welfare State
by David Stoesz
Language: English
Release Date: February 22, 2016

The Dynamic Welfare State makes a case for a radical shift in how we view the roles of both public and private institutions in the United States. It documents the emergence of a third stage in the American welfare state, evident in corporations exploiting markets in healthcare, education, and financial...
Book cover of Pandora's Dilemma

Pandora's Dilemma

Theories of Social Welfare for the 21st Century

by David Stoesz
Language: English
Release Date: October 2, 2017

What are the challenges facing social welfare in America? Theories of stakeholders, the policy process, electoral politics, the precariat, child welfare, online education, the devolution of the welfare state, and its sequel, the investment state, illuminate critical factors determining the future...
Book cover of The Investment State

The Investment State

Charting the Future of Social Policy

by David Stoesz
Language: English
Release Date: June 25, 2018

Historically, the welfare state of the 20th century, which was built on the foundation of an industrial economy, seems poorly adapted to a 21st-century information age. Socially, profound demographic shifts--especially an aging population, increasing numbers of women in the labor force, and surging...
Book cover of The Politics of Child Abuse in America
by Lela B. Costin, Howard Jacob Karger, David Stoesz
Language: English
Release Date: February 27, 1997

Child abuse policy in the United States contains dangerous contradictions, which have only intensified as the public slowly accepted it as a middle class problem. One contradiction is the rapidly expanding child abuse industry (made up of enterprising psychotherapists and attorneys) which is consuming...
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