Representing the Poor: Legal Advocacy and Welfare Reform During Reagan's Gubernatorial Years

Representing the Poor: Legal Advocacy and Welfare Reform During Reagan's Gubernatorial Years

by Mark Neal Aaronson
Representing the Poor: Legal Advocacy and Welfare Reform During Reagan's Gubernatorial Years

Representing the Poor: Legal Advocacy and Welfare Reform During Reagan's Gubernatorial Years

by Mark Neal Aaronson

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Overview

An extended, multifaceted case study of a kind not much found in the literature on social cause lawyering. The narrative highlights the forceful presence of California Governor Ronald Reagan and the pivotal role in representing the welfare poor of Ralph Santiago Abascal, a government-funded legal aid attorney and social reform leader. To fight Reagan�s ambitious welfare policy initiatives, Abascal with other legal services lawyers effected meaningful legal change. In joint cause with recipient-led welfare rights organizations, he relied on court litigation not in isolation but as part of an overall strategy that also involved legislative and administrative actions.

The empirical landscape of this book is the contentious political and legal battle over California welfare reform in the early 1970s. Within the context of American pluralism and constitutionalism, and from an analytical perspective, this study examines the professional and institutional character of group legal representation for the poor as a strategy for political empowerment and social change. While grounded in political and legal history, the book�s conceptual approaches primarily draw on ideas from political science and theory about political representation, and from writings in legal ethics and legal education on professional role responsibilities in the legal representation of people and the groups they are a part of.

These principal thematic points emerge, and are supported by prodigious empirical research, experience, and theory: (1) Social cause lawyering is a systemic necessity for the democratic and equitable functioning of our governing institutions; (2) the client constraints on the role of lawyers for groups or causes have more to do conceptually with understandings about the nature of representation than the applicability of ethical or procedural rules; and (3) the political consequences of such legal advocacy are variable and potentially contradictory. Exploring these dilemmas in the context of anti-poverty representation and reform, the author provides a meaningful context to consider the legal representation of the poor beyond mere lawsuits, legal doctrine, and the ubiquitous popular image of the "welfare queen."

The book also features an extended, fascinating, and telling interview with then-Governor Reagan about his plans for welfare reform and the roadblocks and stories he encountered along the way. This new book develops the research and theory first documented in the author's much-cited but formally unpublished Berkeley doctoral dissertation, entitled "Legal Advocacy and Welfare Reform: Continuity and Change in Public Relief" (1975), which is now finally readily available worldwide in this extensive revision and fresh look at the seismic changes to welfare systems and conceptions of poverty that began in the 1970s.

This quality NOOKbook edition from Quid Pro Books features linked endnotes, active Contents, and proper Bluebook presentation of the extensive references.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149173013
Publisher: Quid Pro, LLC
Publication date: 04/22/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 190
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Mark N. Aaronson is Emeritus Professor of Law at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law. He joined the UC Hastings faculty in 1992 and was the founding director of its Civil Justice Clinic. Before entering full-time teaching, he had an extensive career as a civil rights and anti-poverty lawyer, including serving for thirteen years as Executive Director of the San Francisco Lawyers' Committee for Urban Affairs. He earned his law degree from the University of Chicago and holds undergraduate and graduate degrees, including a PhD in political science, from the University of California, Berkeley.
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