A book report on this 1993 text by Valerie Polakow consists of seven pages.  There are no other sources cited in the bibliography.
                                    
  
                                    
                                     Name of Research Paper File: D0_BWsinmom.rtf
                                    
                                    
                                        
                                            
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                                                    without the support of their father or her partner, she faces a vast amount of challenges that require she be parent, supporter, caretaker, counselor, teacher and more. Every aspect of   
                                                
                                                    those challenges are magnified when she is also trying to do all of this in an atmosphere of poverty. The point that author Valerie Polakow makes in "Lives on the   
                                                
                                                    Edge: Single Mothers and their Children in the Other America" is that it is an unrelenting struggle in which there are painfully few opportunities to escape. "Feminization" and "Infantilzation" of   
                                                
                                                    Poverty 	Polakow presents the grim facts of life in America as an impoverished and single mother.  One out of every five American children, and half of all single mothers,   
                                                
                                                    lives in poverty in America today. The point she repeatedly illustrates is that because of this feminization and "infantilization" of poverty, the United States exists as one of the most   
                                                
                                                    dangerous democracies to live in for poor mothers and their children. Most certainly, that is the "other" America that exists behind the facade of flag-waving consumerism and assertions that this   
                                                
                                                    is the land of freedom and opportunity. And yet, the way that policy is created and services provided to such mothers and children, Polakow says makes it seem as the   
                                                
                                                    nations elected officials and policy-makers think and act as if poverty seen is a private issue rather than a widespread concern for every American. She asks, time and time again,   
                                                
                                                    how can public policy fail to take responsibility for the consequences of Americas politics of wealth distribution? How is it possible to not see the self-perpetuating cycle that is created   
                                                
                                                    as a result of keeping mothers in poverty raising their children in poverty who then grow up to be mothers living in poverty? Once again, it demonstrates that there is