1st Edition

An Atlas of Poverty in America One Nation, Pulling Apart 1960–2003

By Amy Glasmeier Copyright 2006
    118 Pages 195 Color & 195 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    118 Pages 195 Color & 195 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    118 Pages 195 Color & 195 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Persistant poverty has long been one of America's most pressing and intractable problems. According to some estimates, by 2003, almost twenty-five percent of the America's countries had per-capita incomes below one half the national average, high unemployment, low labour force participation rates, and a high dependency on government transfer payments - all measures of economic distress. An Atlas of Poverty in America shows how and where America's regional development patterns have become more uneven, and graphically illustrates the increasing number of communities falling behind the national economic average. Readers will be able to use this Atlas to see how major events and trends have impacted the scope and extent of American poverty in the past half-century:economic globalization, the rise of the sunbelt, decline of the welfare state, and the civil rights movement. Also includes 195 colour maps.

    History of the Atlas Project.  How to Read This Atlas.  Basics of Poverty.  History of Poverty.  Distressed Regions.  History of Poverty Policy

    Biography

    Amy Glasmeier is Professor of Geography and Regional Planning at Penn State University. She is the editor of Economic Geography, both North American and Book Editor for Regional Studies, a Fellow of the Economic Policy Institute, Member of the Rural Poverty Research Center, Founding Member of the World University Network, Member of National Academy Board of Sciences on Infrastructure and the Built Environment, and is the author of eleven previous books.

    "Poverty in America: One Nation, Pulling Apart 1960-2003 is an essential atlas which should be a part of any college-level collection strong in sociology or American history: it charts poverty in the U.S. from the Great Soceity ideas to modern times, offering dozens of color maps compiling the demographic dimensions of poverty across the country.  The cd in the back allows readers to take advantage of comuterized mapping tools, while the atlas comes from a professor of geography at Penn State University."

    --California Book Watch, August 2006