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Take It from Me: Life after Welfare
 

 
Length: 54 min
Released: 2001
Ages: College
Adult
 
Buy DVD:
$295.00  
 
Buy Online Streaming
 
 
Is welfare reform working? This troubling documentary shares the story of four women struggling against enormous odds to raise themselves out of poverty. It provides an in-depth look at the street-level impact of the Personal Responsibility Act, just as the Act’s five-year limit on public assistance first goes into effect.

The film gives people a detailed idea of what welfare recipients are up against trying to make the transition from welfare to work. Ihoka Rivera, her husband and their daughter went on welfare years ago when their home burned down. Now they have lost the support that had been helping Ihoka pursue an education. Abby Perez, a single mother of two whose homelessness landed her children in foster care, is in despair over her inability to afford housing on minimum wage. Teresa Diehl contends with mental illness while struggling to hold down steady work. Valentina Ruiz, a tough survivor of drug addiction and welfare dependence, feels like a winner now that she has found work as a cleaning person.

Take It from Me shows that welfare reform has hardened political and social attitudes towards the poor and made the system increasingly less responsive to individual needs and circumstances.
 
 
"This heartfelt documentary illuminates the complexity of poverty and the erroneous simplicity of much government policy."
‒The New York Times
 
 
POV broadcast, 2001
National Women¹s Studies Association, 2003
 
 
 
• Sociology
 
• Women's Studies
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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