ABSTRACT

The basic ecology of human groups—the relationship between the distribution of population and material resources and the resultant social and cultural patterns—is a subject which has occasioned far more talk than down-to-earth research. Filling this gap, George Sternlieb and Bernard Indik consider one dimension of human ecology— the interplay between housing and outlook, between the physical realities of a dwelling unit and the attitudes and responses of its inhabitants. Their book, The Ecology of Welfare, presents a detailed description of the housing and housing problems of one special subgroup-New York City's welfare recipients in the 1970's.

chapter 1|14 pages

SOME PARAMETERS OF WELFARE

chapter 2|12 pages

METHODOLOGY

chapter 3|26 pages

WHO ARE THE WELFARE RECIPIENTS

chapter 4|46 pages

THE WELFARE RECIPIENT'S HOUSING

chapter 6|30 pages

HOPES AND FEARS OF WELFARE RECIPIENTS

chapter 9|14 pages

POLICY IMPLICATIONS