Produced, written and Directed by Roger Weisberg, Public Policy Productions
Making
Welfare Work examines the current wave of welfare reform in America. In
recent years, many Americans - while troubled by the plight of the poor - have
become frustrated by what appears to be a permanent subculture of welfare dependency
in this country. As a result, a number of states are experimenting with new
financial incentives - "carrots and sticks" - in an effort to restructure
their welfare systems.
This documentary looks at the personal lives behind this complex and controversial welfare reform debate, searching for initiatives that have proven effective. The relative merit of supportive versus punitive measures, the effects of time limits, and the role of child support enforcement are all brought into focus by the real-life stories of families living in states that have become "laboratories" for the welfare reform experiment.
While President Clinton has declared his desire to "end welfare as we know it," there is little consensus over how to make welfare work. This film explores the success as well as the controversy surrounding welfare reform experiments, and cautions us not to further shortchange disadvantaged families in our rush to overhaul a failing welfare system.
58 min. Video or DVD. Sale $295. Video rental $75.
Bronze Plaque, Columbus International Film & Video Festival, 1996
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