Job Training for Mothers Receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children: A Study of the Attitudes of Fifty Volunteer Recipients Who Completed the Training for Employment for Mothers in Part-Time Occupations Program but Did Not Become Employed
Abstract
When the annals of the present age are reviewed at some future point in time, the decade of the 1960s will be especially notable for the reawakening and réintroduction into the mainstream of our society of a widespread recognition of and concern for the vital importance of the field of social welfare, on all levels, for the achievement of a truly democratic society. The reasons and causes of this renaissance are many and varied, but more important even than these, it would seem, are the influences and changes which have been and promise to be effected in American life.
Subject Area
Social work|Labor economics|Management|Individual & family studies
Recommended Citation
Schwartz, Jeffrey Marvin, "Job Training for Mothers Receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children: A Study of the Attitudes of Fifty Volunteer Recipients Who Completed the Training for Employment for Mothers in Part-Time Occupations Program but Did Not Become Employed" (1968). ETD Collection for Fordham University. AAI30359782.
https://research.library.fordham.edu/dissertations/AAI30359782