Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender
Thesis advisor: David Blustein === This qualitative study explored the experiences of women going through a welfare-to-work program in a northeastern setting. Specifically, the women's identities as mothers, women of color, and women living in poverty were examined. Feminist and critical theo...
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ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1013192019-05-10T07:37:01Z Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender Kenna, Alexandra C. Thesis advisor: David Blustein Text thesis 2008 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This qualitative study explored the experiences of women going through a welfare-to-work program in a northeastern setting. Specifically, the women's identities as mothers, women of color, and women living in poverty were examined. Feminist and critical theory informed the research questions and literature review. Qualitative description and content analysis were used to analyze the data from 10 interviews. The concepts that emerged described the women's experiences going through the program, their identity as mothers and caregivers, the negative psychological experiences and impact of going through the system, feeling labeled and misunderstood, obstacles and barriers to success, forms of resilience and resistance, and their relationship with work. Four major inferences were gleaned from the results: the need to integrate the experience of motherhood/caregiving more explicitly into WTW, the need for more attention to mental health concerns, an alarming level of corruption and corruption within the welfare system itself, and a dialectical struggle between the theoretical and practical experience of work and employment. Implications for practice, policy, and research are discussed. welfare-to-work women feminist theory critical theory work career Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology. 127117 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1352 |
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welfare-to-work women feminist theory critical theory work career |
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welfare-to-work women feminist theory critical theory work career Kenna, Alexandra C. Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
description |
Thesis advisor: David Blustein === This qualitative study explored the experiences of women going through a welfare-to-work program in a northeastern setting. Specifically, the women's identities as mothers, women of color, and women living in poverty were examined. Feminist and critical theory informed the research questions and literature review. Qualitative description and content analysis were used to analyze the data from 10 interviews. The concepts that emerged described the women's experiences going through the program, their identity as mothers and caregivers, the negative psychological experiences and impact of going through the system, feeling labeled and misunderstood, obstacles and barriers to success, forms of resilience and resistance, and their relationship with work. Four major inferences were gleaned from the results: the need to integrate the experience of motherhood/caregiving more explicitly into WTW, the need for more attention to mental health concerns, an alarming level of corruption and corruption within the welfare system itself, and a dialectical struggle between the theoretical and practical experience of work and employment. Implications for practice, policy, and research are discussed. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology. |
author |
Kenna, Alexandra C. |
author_facet |
Kenna, Alexandra C. |
author_sort |
Kenna, Alexandra C. |
title |
Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
title_short |
Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
title_full |
Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
title_fullStr |
Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
title_full_unstemmed |
Exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate Welfare-to-Work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
title_sort |
exploring women’s multiple identities as they negotiate welfare-to-work : the intersection of race, class, and gender |
publisher |
Boston College |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1352 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kennaalexandrac exploringwomensmultipleidentitiesastheynegotiatewelfaretoworktheintersectionofraceclassandgender |
_version_ |
1719079329970782208 |