At the intersection of immigration and welfare governance in the United States: State, county and frontline levels and clients’ perspectives

Author:

Lanfranconi Lucia M.1,Chang Yu-Ling2,Basaran Ayda3

Affiliation:

1. Lucerne School of Social Work, Institute for Social Management, Social Policy and Prevention , Berkeley US

2. University of California , Berkeley , US

3. Columbia University, Columbia College , Columbia US

Abstract

Abstract The U.S welfare reform of 1996 restricted the eligibility of immigrants and introduced a punitive and devolved workfare system. While previous studies explained state variation in the welfare eligibility rules for immigrants, few studies have examined the intersection of immigration and welfare governance within a state. We choose the Californian welfare-to-work (WTW) program as a case, most likely to be inclusive to immigrants. Analyzing statistics, documents, and interviews at the state, county, and frontline levels, however, we also reveal multiple exclusionary mechanisms at various policy levels, such as complicated processes and insufficient translations. Our analysis of immigrant clients’ interviews helps to understand why many immigrants decide not to apply for welfare and how even WTW participants with an immigration background experience fear and are especially vulnerable to unfair treatments. Thus, the implementation of the punitive workfare regime along with the restrictive immigration regime can contradict the aim of WTW-policy to lead families in poverty to selfsufficiency.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference47 articles.

1. Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina; Averett, Susan L.; Bansak, Cynthia A. (2016): “Welfare Reform and Immigrant Fertility”, Journal of Population Economics 29(3): 757–779.

2. Artiga, Samantha; Damicio, Anthony (2018): Nearly 20 Million Children Live in Immigrant Families that Could Be Affected by Evolving Immigration Policy. Download at: https://www.kff.org/disparities-policy/issue-brief/nearly-20-million-children-live-inimmigrant-families-that-could-be-affected-by-evolving-immigration-policies/ (access on 1.12.2020).

3. Bakonyi, Noémi; Regös, Erika Nóra; Holzinger, Clara; Scheibelhofer, Elisabeth (2018): Any Transnational Social Security out There? NORFACE Welfare State Futures, Scientific Coordination Office, Berlin. WSF working papers TRANSWEL #2/2018.

4. Bartle, Elizabeth; Segura, Gabriela (2003): “Welfare Policy, Welfare Participants, and Cal-WORKS Caseworkers: How Participants Are Informed of Supportive Services”, Journal of Poverty 7(1–2): 141–161.

5. Boghani, Priyanka (2019): A Guide to Some Major Trump Administration Immigration Policies. FRONTLINE. Download at: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/a-guide-to-somemajor-trump-administration-immigration-policies/ (access on 1.12.2020).

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1. Claim and Blame: How Welfare Law institutionalises Deservingness;Transformations of European Welfare States and Social Rights;2023-12-30

2. Implementing Equity and Equality at the Frontline in Two Contrasting Welfare-To-Work (WTW) Organizations in California;Human Service Organizations: Management, Leadership & Governance;2022-11-12

3. Becoming Job-Ready? Narratives of Local Welfare-to-Work Programs and Client Experiences Across Differing Economic Contexts in California;Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services;2021-12-11

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