Introduction Part I: War and Its Aftermath 1: Californians Secure Wartime Child Care 2: Postwar Hopes: The Fight for Permanent Child Care, 1945-47 Part II: Mobilizing During the Cold War 3: ''Child Care Is a State Problem'': Working Mothers and Educators Take Action, 1947-51 4: ''We Need to Stand Together'': Theresa Mahler, Mary Young, and the Coalition's Victory in the 1950s Part III: The War on Poverty and the Age of Protest 5: ''We Do Not Consider Ourselves Welfare Cases'': Education-Based Child Care and Low-Income Working Families, 1958-1965 6: A Different Kind of Welfare State: The Coalition in the Age of Protest, 1966-71 Conclusion
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
''A gripping tale of California politics, working women's activism, and the welfare state. Fousekis introduces readers to a remarkable cast of characters: ordinary women who recognized that to support their families they needed the peace of mind that quality child care could provide; visionary educators and teachers who understood child care as part of public education, and not social assistance; and male allies in the legislature and public service who were instrumental in policymaking.''--Eileen Boris, coeditor of The Practice of U.S. Women's History: Narratives, Dialogues, and Intersections''A delightful book of interest to students and scholars of the welfare state, second-wave feminism, social reformers, the history of education, and the anti-Communist movement. Fousekis does an exemplary job of integrating women's personal stories into the childcare movement.''--Robyn Muncy, author of Creating a Female Dominion in American Reform, 18901935