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Education:
B.A.
Brooklyn College (Sociology); MSW, Ph.D. (University of Pittsburgh).
Areas
of specialization:
Comparative welfare state analysis, child welfare, evaluation
research.
Courses
Taught:
Research Methods (SW 282 AB), Introduction of Social Welfare Policy
(SW 220), History and Philosophy of Social Welfare (SW 279).
Research Interests:
Design
and evaluation of social service delivery systems; theoretical
framework for social policy analysis; evaluative research; the
welfare state; administration and organizational theory; family
policy and child abuse prevention; comparative social welfare.
Selected
Publications:
Gilbert, N.
(2002) Transformation
of the Welfare State: The Silent Surrender of Public Responsibility
(Oxford University Press, 2002) Reviewed in The New Republic
and The New York Review of Books
Gilbert, N.
(1995). Welfare Justice: Restoring Social Equity, Yale
University Press.
Gilbert, N.,
Specht, H. & Terrell, P. (1993). Dimensions Of Social Welfare
Policy (3rd edition), Prentice-Hall.
Gilbert, N.
& Gilbert, B. (1989). The Enabling State: Modern Welfare Capitalism
In America, Oxford University Press.
Gilbert, N.
(1984). Capitalism and The Welfare State, Yale University
Press. New York Times Notable Book.
For C.V. and
more information on his research please go to:
http://www.neilgilbert.com/
Neil
Gilbert on Welfare, Underclass, and Working poor:
As the American
public celebrates the good news of a booming economy, declining
rates of crime and illegitimacy, and more than a 40% reduction
in the welfare roles, Charles Murray once again sounds the alarm
that a large, virulent, and growing underclass is infecting the
political and social culture. Murray's concerns are based largely
on his interpretation of the facts about crime and illegitimacy,
and the presumed influence of underclass culture. On the matter
of crime and illegitimacy, the facts are correct, but the interpretations
give short shrift to the social complexities inherent in the trends
described and create a tenuous link to "cultural degeneration.
More
on Welfare, Underclass, and Working Poor.......
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