課程資訊
課程名稱
貧窮、就業與社會政策
Poverty, Employment and Social Policy 
開課學期
109-1 
授課對象
社會科學院  社會工作學研究所  
授課教師
林萬億 
課號
SW8012 
課程識別碼
330 D2200 
班次
 
學分
3.0 
全/半年
半年 
必/選修
選修 
上課時間
星期六2,3,4(9:10~12:10) 
上課地點
社318 
備註
上課教室為社會社工系館422教室。
限碩士班以上
總人數上限:12人
外系人數限制:3人 
Ceiba 課程網頁
http://ceiba.ntu.edu.tw/1091SW8012_ 
課程簡介影片
 
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課程概述

這是一門博士班的專題討論課程,內容聚焦在貧窮、就業、失業、勞動市場政策及社會政策相關議題。後工業化、全球化、人口老化、少子女化帶來工作模式的改變、無人駕駛、無人商店、物聯網、綠色經濟發達,導致非典型就業、失業與低薪工作的增加、貧富差距擴大。於是,新貧、工作貧窮被認為是後工業國家必須面對的新社會風險。其中兒童貧窮、青年失業、非典型勞動、老年貧窮更受到各國的關切。
This seminar is about the relationships between work, poverty and social policy. All welfare states in the post-industrial world have had to respond to changes in patterns of employment at the same time as a general trend towards increasing income inequalities and poverty prevails in many countries, where child poverty, working poor recently has been paid closer attention due to the potential adverse consequences for well-being of children, youth as well as for their market prospects. 

課程目標
本課程將透過對歐洲、美國等國家的積極勞動政策、社會政策的瞭解,試圖尋找有助於解決新貧、工作貧窮、失業與就業促進的政策與方案。在這其中,不可避免地必須處理在全球化下各國向下競逐、福利緊縮所帶來的低技術、低薪工作、不穩定就業,以及社會福利財源的不足,造成的貧窮消除的障礙。
The purpose of this course is to analyze structures, determinants and outcomes of social policy legislation in post-war welfare democracies from a macro-sociological and institutional perspective. A main question is to what extent the motives of different combating poverty policies and active labour market policies (ALMPs) can be linked to child poverty and in-work poverty. 
課程要求
每一參與課程的研究生必須針對每一主題,參與閱讀與討論,並以國內經驗為例發展討論議題,進行理論反思與對策構想。並於期末提交一篇與自己博士論文寫作有關的學期報告,頁數15-20,期末繳交。學期成績包括課堂參與討論(40%)與學期報告(60%)兩者。
Students will be expected to present and discuss their paper in class in the late weeks. Papers should be 15-20 pages and the due on the last day of class. 
預期每週課後學習時數
 
Office Hours
 
指定閱讀
參考每週課程進度 
參考書目
參考每週課程進度 
評量方式
(僅供參考)
   
課程進度
週次
日期
單元主題
第1週
09/19  課程介紹 
第2週
09/26  1. Context of Poverty, Definition and Measurement
Alcock, P. (2006). Understanding Poverty, 3rd (ed.), Palgrave.
Baulch, B. (2006). The New Poverty Agenda: A Disputed Consensus (Editorial). IDS Bulletin, 37(4), 82-90.
*Brady, D. (2009). Rich Democracies, Poor People: how politics explain poverty. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch.2-3.
*Chimakonam, J. O. (2020). Where Are We in the Global Poverty Measurement? The Human Minimum Model as a Veritable Option, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 55(4): 509-521.
Gallardo, M. (2020). Measuring Vulnerability to Multidimensional Poverty, Social Indicators Research, 148:67-103.
Sumner, A. (2016). Global Poverty: deprivation, distribution, and development since the cold war. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
*Wagle, U. (2002). Rethinking poverty: definition and measurement, International Social Science Journal, 54: 155-165. 
第3週
10/03  2. Different Disciplines, Different Perceptions
*Brady, D. (2019). Theories of the Causes of Poverty, Annu. Rev. Sociol, 45:155-75.
Brady, D. (2009) Rich Democracies, Poor People: how politics explain poverty. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch. 5-8.
Bowles, S., Durlauf, S., Hoff, K. (2006). Poverty Traps, Russell Sage Foundation/Princeton University Press.
Collins, D., Morduch, J. Rutherford, S. & Ruthven, O. (2009). Portfolios of the Poor: how the world’s poor live on $2 a day. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
*Farthing, R. (2016). What’s Wrong with Being Poor? The Problems of Poverty, as Young People Describe them, Children & Society, 30, 107-119.
Jung, S-Y. and Smith, R. J. (2007). The Economics of Poverty: Explanatory Theories to Inform Practice. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 10(1/2), 21-39.
Kakwani, N. and Silber, J. (eds.) (2007). The Many Dimensions of Poverty, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
*Kim, Y., Lee, S., Jung, H., Jaime, J., & Cubbin, C. (2018). Is neighborhood poverty harmful to every child? Neighborhood poverty, family poverty, and behavioral problems among young children, J. Community Psychol, 47:594-610.
Leisering, L. and Leibfried, S. (2000). Time and Poverty in Western Welfare State: United Germany in Perspective. Cambridge: University of Cambridge Press.
Levine, D. P. and Rizvi, S. A. T. (2005). Poverty Work and Freedom: political economy and the moral order. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Ch.5-9.
Ludwig, J. and Mayer, S. (2006). “Culture” and the Intergenerational Transmission of Poverty: The Prevention Paradox. The Future of Children, 16(2), 175-196.
Marcus, A. F., Echeverria, S. E. Holland, B. K., Abraido-Lanza, A., & Passannante, M. R. (2015). How Neighborhood Poverty Structures Types and Levels of Social Integration, Am J Community Psychol, 56:134-144.
Mohan, B. (2011). Development, Poverty of Culture and Social Policy. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Murrgarra, E. Larrison, J., & Sasin, M. (2011). Migration and Poverty: toward better opportunities for the poor, The World Bank.
Newman, K. and O’brien, R. (2011). Taxing the poor: doing damage to the truly disadvantaged. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Osterling, K. L. (2007). PartⅡ: Theory Integration and Practitioner Perspectives. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 16(1/2), 123-147.
Romano, S. (2018). Moralising Poverty: the underserving poor in the public gaze, London: Routledge.
*Sheppard, E., Sparks, T., & Leitner, H. (2020). World Class Aspirations, Urban Informality, and Poverty Politics: A North-South Comparison, Antipode 52(2), 393-407.  
第4週
10/10  國定假日 
第5週
10/17  3. Child Poverty
Baker, R. S. (2015). The Changing Association Among Marriage, Work, and Child Poverty in the United States, 1974-2010, Journal of Marriage and Family, 77 (October): 1166-1178.
Bradbury, B., Jenkins, S. P. and Micklewright, J. (2001). The Dynamics of Child Poverty in Industrialised Countries, United Nations: UNICEF。
*Cantillon, B., Chzhen, Y., Handa, S., & Nolan, B. (2017). Children of Austerity: Impact of the Great Recession on Child Poverty in Rich Countries. United Nations: UNICEF, Ch. 2, 14.
Heberle, A. E. and Carter, A. S. (2020). Is Poverty on Young Minds? Stereotype Endorsement, Disadvantage Awareness, and Social-Emotional Challenges in Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Children, Developmental Psychology, 56(2), 336-349.
Jones, N. and Sumner, A. (2011). Child Poverty, Evidence and Policy: mainstreaming children in international development. Bristol: The Policy Press.
*Landers, A. L., Carrese, D. H., & Spath, R. (2019). A Decade in Review of Trends in Social Work Literature: The Link between Poverty and Child Maltreatment in the United States, Child Welfare, 97(4), 65-96.
Mattingly, M. J., Wimer, C. T., & Collyer, S. M. (2017). Child Care Costs and Poverty among Families with Young Children, American Journal of Medical Research, 4(2), 162-167.
*McLaughlin, M. and Rank, M. R. (2018). Estimating the Economic Cost of Childhood Poverty in the United States, Social Work Research, 42(2), 72-83.
Ridge, T. and Millar, J. (2011). Following Families: Working Lone-Mother Families and their Children, Social Policy & Administration, 45: 1, 85-97. 
第6週
10/24  4. Feminization of Poverty
Barker, M. (2009). Working their Way Out of Poverty? Gendered Employment in Three Welfare States, Journal of Comparative Family Studies, Special edition, 617-637.
*Bradshaw, S., Chant, S., & Linneker, B. (2019). Challenges and Changes in Gendered Poverty: the Feminization, De-Feminization, and Re-Feminization of Poverty in Latin America, Feminist Economics, 25(1), 119-144.
Chant, S. (2007). Gender, Generation and Poverty: exploring the ‘Feminisation of poverty’ in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
*Corsi, M., Botti, F. and D’Ippoliti, C. (2016). The Gendered Nature of Poverty in The EU: Individualized vs. Collective Poverty Measures, Feminist Economics, 22(4), 82-100.
Evans, P. M. (2009). Lone mothers, workfare and precarious employment: Time for a Canadian Basic Income? International Social Security Review, 62: 1, 45-65.
*Goldberg, G. S. (2010). Poor Women in Rich Countries: the feminize of poverty over the life course. Oxford: Oxford University.Ch.1.
*Lange, B. C. L., Dáu, A. L. B. T., Goldblum, J., Alfano, J., & Smith, M.V. (2017). A Mixed Methods Investigation of the Experience of Poverty Among a Population of Low-Income Parenting Women, Community Ment Health J., 53:832-841.
O’Leary, A., and Frew, P. M. (2017). Poverty in the United States: women’s voices, NY: Springer. Ch.4,7,8,9. 
第7週
10/31  5. Poverty and Health
Anakwenze, U. and Zuberi, D. (2013). Mental health and Poverty in Inner City, Health & Social Work, 38:3, 147-157.
Bhui, K., Warfa, N., & Jones, E. (2014). Is Violent Radicalisation Associated with Poverty, Migration, Poor Self-Reported Health and Common Mental Disorders? PLOS ONE, 9:3, 1-10.
Brodin, H. C., Weber, A., Glatzc, A. and Bünger, J. (2010). Working poor in Germany: Dimensions of the problem and repercussions for the health-care System, Journal of Public Health Policy, 31: 3, 298–311.
Burton, L. & Bromel, L. (2010). Children Illness, Family Comorbidity, and Cumulative Disadvantage: An Ethnographic Treatise on Low-Income Mothers’ Health in Later Life, Ch.11, Springer Publishing Company.
Cutts, D. B. et al., (2011). US housing insecurity and the health of very young children, American Journal of Public Health, 101:8, 1508-1516.
Hernandez, V. R.; S. Montana, and K. Clarke (2010). Child Health Inequality: Framing a Social Work Response, Social Work, 35:4, 291-301.
Iyer, A., Sen, G., & Östlin, P. (2008). The Intersections of Gender and Class in Health Status and Health Care. Global Public Health, 3(S1), 13-24.
Jenkins, Rachel et al., (2011). Social, economic, human rights and political challenges to global mental health, Mental Health in Family Medicine, 8:87–96.
Mendenhall, R. (2018). The Medicalization of Poverty in the Lives of Low Income Black Mothers and Children, The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 46: 644-650.
*Oshio, T. (2019). Exploring the health-relevant poverty line: a study using the data of 663,000 individuals in Japan, International Journal for Equity in Health, 18:205, 1-9.
Peters, David H. et al., (2008). Poverty and Access to Health Care in Developing Countries, Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1136: 161–171.
*Sage, W. M. and Laurin, J. E. (2018). If You Would Not Criminalize Poverty, Do Not Medicalize It, The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 46:573-581.
Strauss, Z. and Horsten, D. (2013). A Human Right-Based to Poverty Reduction: the role of the right of access to medicine as an element of the right of access to health care. PER / PELJ, (16)3, 335-375.
*Thomas, F., Wyatt, K. and Hansford, L. (2020). The violence of narrative: embodying responsibility for poverty-related stress, Sociology of Health & Illness, 42(5), 1123-1138.
*Webb, B. C. and Matthew, D. B. (2018). Housing: A Case for The Medicalization of Poverty, The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 46: 588-594. 
第8週
11/07  6. Poverty and Housing
Alexander-Eitzman, B. et al., (2013). The Neighborhood Context of Homelessness, American Journal of Public Health, Feb.14, 1-7.
*Barrett, E. J. (2016). Dismantling Public Housing, Reconstructing the Lives of Children, Child & Society, 30, 96–106.
Blessing, A. (2015). Public, Private, or In-Between? The Legitimacy of Social Enterprises in the Housing Market, Voluntas, 26:198–221.
de Vet, Renée et al., (2013). Effectiveness of Case Management for Homeless Persons: A Systematic Review, American Journal of Public Health, 103:10, e13-26.
Fitzpatrick, S. & Pleace, N. (2012). The Statutory Homelessness System in England: A Fair and Effective Rights-Based Model? Housing Studies, 27: 2, 232–251.
Kemp, Peter A. (2011). Low-income Tenants in the Private Rental Housing Market, Housing Studies, 26: 7–8, 1019–1034.
Martens, B. (2016). World Perspectives on Social Housing IRGE Paper Examines International Affordable Housing, Journal of Housing & Community Development, September/October, 16-19.
McClure, K. (2008). Deconcentrating Poverty with Housing Programs, Journal of the American Planning Association, 74:1, 90-101.
Muir, J. and Mullins, D. (2015). The Governance of Mandated Partnerships: The Case of Social Housing Procurement, Housing Studies, 30(6), 967–986.
Pawson, H. and Mullins, D. (2010). After Council Housing: Britain’s new social landlords. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Rowlands, R.; Musterd, S. and van Kempen, R. (2009). Mass Housing in Europe, multiple faces of development, change and response. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
*Saunders, P. (2017). Housing costs, poverty and inequality in Australia, Housing Studies, 32(6), 742-757.
*Scanlon, K., Arrigoitia, F. M., & Whitehead, C. (2015). Social housing in Europe. European Policy Analysis, (17), 1-12.
Somerville, P. and Sprigings, N. (eds.) (2005). Housing and Social Policy : contemporary themes and critical perspectives, London: Routledge.
Stephens, M. and Van Steen, G. (2011). ‘Housing Poverty’ and Income Poverty in England and The Netherlands, Housing Studies, 26: 7–8, 1035–1057.
*Stephens M. and Leishman, C. (2017). Housing and poverty: a longitudinal analysis, Housing Studies, 32(8), 1039-1061.
Taylor, C. and Donoghue, J. (2016). The Greenway social housing estate: lessons in community development, Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance, Issue 19, 157-163.
Grander, M. (2017). New public housing: a selective model disguised as universal? Implications of the market adaptation of Swedish public housing, International Journal of Housing Policy, 17(3), 335-352. 
第9週
11/14  7. Different Faces of In-work Poverty
Andere, H. and Lohmann, H. (2008). The Working Poor in Europe: employment, poverty and globalization. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Ch. 1-2.
*Ashford, R. (2015). Why Working but Poor? The Need for Inclusive Capitalism, Akron Law Review, 49(2), 507-536.
*Dobos, N. (2019). Exploitation, Working Poverty, and the Expressive Power of Wages, Journal of Applied Philosophy, 36(2), 333-347.
Filandri, M. & Struffolino, E. (2019). Individual and household in-work poverty in Europe: understanding the role of labor market characteristics, European Societies, 21:1, 130-157.
*Fraser, N.; Gutierrez, R. and Pena-Casas (2011). Working Poor in Europe: a comparative approach. NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Ch. 2-3. 
第10週
11/21  8. Combating In-work Poverty
Andere, H. and Lohmann, H. (2008). The Working Poor in Europe: employment, poverty and globalization. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
*Fraser, N.; Gutiérrez, R. and Peña-Casas (2011). Working Poor in Europe: a comparative approach. NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Ch. 4-7. 
第11週
11/28  9. Cross-cutting Issues of In-work Poverty
*Fraser, N.; Gutiérrez, R. and Peña-Casas (2011). Working Poor in Europe: a comparative approach. NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Ch. 9-11, 13. 
第12週
12/05  10. Activation and Labour Market Reforms (I)
Aerschot, P. V. (2011). Activation Policies and the Protection of Individual Rights: a critical assessment of the situation in Demark, Finland and Sweden. Ashgate.
Betzelt, S. and Bothfeld, S. (2011). Activation and Labour Market Reforms in Europe: challenges to social citizenship. NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Daguerre, A. (2007). Active Labour Market Policies and Welfare Reform: Europe and the US in comparative perspective. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Dostal, J. M. (2008). The Workfare Illusion: Re-examing the Concept and the British Case. Social Policy and Administration, 42(1), 19-42.
Hansen, L. L. (2007). From Flexicurity to FlexicArity? Gendered Perspectives on the Danish Model. Journal of Social Sciences, 3(2), 88-93.
Lindsay, C. and McQuaid, R. W. (2009). New Governance and the Case of Activation Policies: Comparing Experiences in Denmark and the Netherlands, Social Policy & Administration, 43:5, 445-463.
*Lødemel, I and Moreira, A. (2014). Activation or Workfare? Governance and the Neo-Liberal Convergence, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch.1-4.
Macleavy, J. (2007). Engendering New Labour’s Workfarist Regime: Exploring the Intersection of Welfare State Restructuring and Labour Market Policies in the UK. Gender, Place and Culture, 14(6), 721-743.
Macleavy, J. and Peoples, C. (2009). Workfare–Warfare: Neoliberalism, “Active” Welfare and the New American Way of War, Antipote, 41:5, 890-915.
Marston, G., & McDonald, C. (2008). Feeling Motivated Yet? Long-term Unemployed People’s Perspectives on the Implementation of Workfare in Australia. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 43(2), 255-269.
Newman, I. (2011). Work as a route out of poverty: a critical evaluation of the UK welfare to work policy, Policy Studies, 32(2), 91-108.
Van Berkel, R., Caswell, D., Kupka, P., & Larsen, F. (2017). Frontline Delivery of Welfare-to-Work Policies in Europe: activating the unemployed, London: Routledge. 
第13週
12/12  11. Activation and Labour Market Reforms (II)
Betzelt, S. and Bothfeld, S. (2011). Activation and Labour Market Reforms in Europe: challenges to social citizenship. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Bőhnke, P. (2010). Implications of the Activation Paradigm on Poverty and Social Exclusion in Germany: Facts, Hypotheses, Uncertainties, German Policy Study, 6:1, 185-209.
Butler, S. S. (2008). Long-Term TANF Participants and Barriers to Employment: A Qualitative Study in Maine. Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare,ⅩⅩⅩⅤ(3), 49-69.
Dingelldey, I. (2007). Between workfare and enablement – The different paths to transformation of the welfare state: A comparative analysis of activating labour market policies, European Journal of Political Research, 46: 823–851.
East, J. F., & Bussey, M. (2007). “I Was Scared Every Day”: Surviving in the TANF Environment. Journal of Policy Practice, 6(3), 45-64.
Gerlitz, J-Y. (2017). Rising In-work Poverty in Times of Activation: Changes in the Distributive Performance of Institutions over Three Decades, Germany 1984–2013, Soc Indic Res, 140:1109-1129.
Handler, J. and Hasenfeld, Y. (2007). Blame Welfare, Ignore Poverty and Inequality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kopf, E. and Zabel, C. (2017). Activation programmes for women with a partner in Germany: Challenge or replication of traditional gender roles, Int J Soc Welfare, 26: 239-253.
*Lødemel, I and Moreira, A. (2014). Activation or Workfare? Governance and the Neo-Liberal Convergence, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch.5-8.
Ludwig-Mayerhofer, W., Behrend, O., & Sondermann, A. (2014). Activation, Public Employment Services and their Clients: The Role of Social Class in a Continental Welfare State, Social Policy & Administration, 48(5), 594-612.
Morgan, A. Acker, J., & Weigt, J. (2010). Stretched Thin: poor families, welfare work, and welfare reform. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Ch.6.
Wacquant, L. C. (2010). Crafting the Neoliberal State: Workfare, Prisonfare, and Social Insecurity, Sociological Forum, 25:2, 197-223.
Wacquant, L. (2009). Punishing the Poor: the neoliberal government of social insecurity. Durham: Duke University Press. 
第14週
12/19  12. Activation and Labour Market Reforms (III)
Betzelt, S. and Bothfeld, S. (2011). Activation and Labour Market Reforms in Europe: challenges to social citizenship. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Cook, S., Heintz, J., & Kabeer, N. (2008). Economic Growth, Social Protection and ‘Real’ Labour Markets: Linking Theory and Policy. IDS Bulletin,39(2), 1-10.
HarslØf, I. (2005). ‘Integrative’ or ‘Defensive’ Youth Activation in Nine European Welfare States. Journal of Youth Studies, 8(4), 461-481.
*Lødemel, I and Moreira, A. (2014). Activation or Workfare? Governance and the Neo-Liberal Convergence, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch.9-12.
Malmgerg-Heimonen, I., & Vuori, J. (2005). Financial Incentive and Job-Search Training: Methods to Increase Labour Market Integration in Contemporary Welfare States? Social Policy & Administration, 39(3), 247-259.
Millar, M. and Crosse, R. (2018). Lone Parent Activation in Ireland: Putting the Cart before the Horses? Social Policy & Administration, 52(1), 111-129.  
第15週
12/26  13. Activation and Labour Market Reforms (IV)
Barsoum, G. (2018). Can youth activation policies be central to social policies in MENA countries? International Social Security Review, 71, 2, 39-56.
*Benda, L., Koster, F., & Van Der Veen, R. (2020). Activation is not a panacea: active labour market policy, long-term unemployment and institutional complementarity, Jnl. Soc. Pol., 49, 3, 483-506.
Danforth, B. (2014). Worlds of welfare in time: A historical reassessment of the three-world typology, Journal of European Social Policy, 24(2):164-182.
*Greve, B. (2017). Welfare States and Labour Market Change: What is the Possible Relation? Social Policy and Administration, 51(2): 389-403.
*Mantouvalou, V. (2020). Welfare-to-Work, Structural Injustice and Human Rights, The Modern Law Review, 83(5), 929-954.
*Raffass, T. (2017). Demanding Activation, Jnl Soc. Pol., 46, 2, 349-365. 
第16週
01/02  14. Poverty, Work and Social Policy
*Banerjee, A. V. and Duflo, E. (2020). How Poverty Ends: The Many Paths to Progress--and Why They Might Not Continue, Foreign Affairs, January /February, 22-29.
Barrientos, A. and Hulme, D. (2008). Social protection for the Poor and Poorest: concepts, Policies and Politics. NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Ch.1-5.
Cantillon, B. and Vandenbroucke, F. (2014). Reconciling Work and Poverty Reduction: how successful are European welfare states? Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gao, Q. (2017). Welfare, Work, and Poverty: social assistance in China, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gustafsson, B., Li, S., & Sicular, T. (2008). Inequality and Public Policy in China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Haikkola, L. (2019). Shaping activation policy at the street level: Governing inactivity in youth employment services, Acta Sociologica, 62(3), 334-348.
*Haskins, R. (2017). Helping Work Reduce Poverty, National Affairs, Winter, 84-99.
Heidenreich, M. and Rice, D. (2016). Integrating Social and Employment Policies in Europe: active inclusion and challenges for local welfare governance, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.
Hulme, A. (2010). Global Poverty: how global governance is failing the poor. London: Routledge.
Hufkens, T., Figari, F., Vandelannoote, D. Verbist, G. (2020). Investing in subsidized childcare to reduce poverty, Journal of European Social Policy, 30(3), 306-319.
Joseph, J. (2010). Poverty Reduction and the New Global Governmentality, Alternatives, 35, 29–51.
Johansson, H. and Panican, A. (2016). Combating Poverty in Local Welfare Systems: active inclusion strategies in European cities, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Lobao, L. and Kraybill, D. (2009). Poverty and Local Governments: Economic Development and Community Service Provision in an Era of Decentralization, Growth and Change, 40: 3, 418–451.
*Marques, P., Salavisa, I., & Lagoa, S. (2015). What are the best policies for fighting poverty? Learning from the recent European experience, Portuguese Journal of Social Science, 14(2), 207-223.
Mazer, K. (2019). Making the Welfare State Work for Extraction: Poverty Policy as the Regulation of Labor and Land, Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 109(1), 18-34.
*Minas, R., Jakobsen, V., Kauppinen, T., Korpi, T., & Lorentzen, T. (2018). The governance of poverty: Welfare reform, activation policies, and social assistance benefits and caseloads in Nordic countries, Journal of European Social Policy, 28(5), 487-500.
Roy, A. (2010). Poverty Capital: microfinance and the making of development. London: Routledge.
Thompson, M. N. and Dahling, J. J. (2019). Employment and Poverty: Why Work Matters in Understanding Poverty, American Psychologist, 74(6), 673- 684.
Trlifajová, L. and Hurrle, J. (2019). Work must pay: Does it? Precarious employment and employment motivation for low-income households, Journal of European Social Policy, 29(3), 376-395.
Vandelannoote, D. and Verbist, G. (2020). The impact of in-work benefits on work incentives and poverty in four European countries, Journal of European Social Policy, 30(2) 144-157. 
第17週
01/09  15. Social Work and Poverty Alleviation
Baloyi, T.V. (2019). Impact of Investment in Human Capital for Sustainable Income Generating Projects: Poverty Alleviation - a Social Work Perspective, Gender & Behaviour, 17(2), 13118-13125.
Jindra, M. & Jindra, I. W. (2016). Poverty and the Controversial Work of Nonprofits, Social Science and Public Policy, 53:634-640.
*Jindra, M., Paulle, B. & Jindra, I. W. (2020). Relational Work in the Struggle Against Poverty: Balancing Scholarly Critiques and Emancipatory Practices in the Nonprofit Sector, Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 49(1):160-179.
Lindsay, C., Pearson, S., Batty, E., Cullen, A. M., & Eadson, W. (2018). Co-production and social innovation in street-level employability services: Lessons from services with lone parents in Scotland, International Social Security Review, 71(4), 33-50.
*Morris, K. et al., (2018). Social work, poverty, and child welfare interventions, Child & Family Social Work, 23:364-372.
*Shook, J., Goodkind, S., Engel, R. J., Wexler, S., & Ballentine, K. L. (2020). Moving Beyond Poverty: Effects of Low-Wage Work on Individual, Social, and Family Well-Being, Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services, 101(3): 249-259.
*Saar-Heiman, Y., Lavie-Ajayi, M., & and Krumer-Nevo, M. (2017). Poverty-aware social work practice: service users’ perspectives, Child and Family Social Work, 22, 1054-1063.
Saar‐Heiman, Y. (2019). Poverty‐aware social work in the child protection system: A critical reflection on two single‐cases, Child & Family Social Work, 24:610-618.
Ulmestiga, R. and Marston, G. (2015). Street-level Perceptions of Procedural Rights for Young Unemployed People – A Comparative Study between Sweden and Australia, Social Policy & Administration, 49(3), 394-411.