"This is a must-read book for educators and activists interested in the topics of race, class, gender, and education, but also, I believe, for everyone who cares about American democracy and social justice … The book's style will hold readers' attention even if they don't know much about American social policy and welfare laws." — Alice E. Ginsberg, Feminist Teacher
"…Shut Out provides a rich array of scholarship on the subject … Written on the eve of the reauthorization of federal welfare reform, with even harsher work requirements, in the 108th Congress, Shut Out is a call for action." — Feminist Collections
"As the tide of welfare 'reform' in the United States continues to push rightward and the Congress moves to press for even more work requirements and even less opportunities for postsecondary education, this book reminds us that there are much better ways to reduce poverty and provide real economic futures for poor mothers and their families." — Feminist Economics
"Research that explores the perspective and daily lives of welfare recipients, particularly individuals participating in higher education or vocational training programs, has been limited. This book therefore offers an important contribution to the field." — Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
"This well-organized reader by social work and education researchers on welfare recipients' access to postsecondary education observes … that the 1996 welfare overhaul made it difficult for low-income women with children to pursue higher education." — CHOICE
"The essays collected here demonstrate that 'welfare reform' is not about helping women escape the so-called welfare trap, but about keeping women entrapped, in low wage work and deep poverty. One way this is being accomplished is by constructing virtually insuperable obstacles to the pursuit of higher education and the possibility of better jobs and earnings. Read this book to learn about this side of our new welfare policies." — Frances Fox Piven, author of The War at Home: The Domestic Causes and Consequences of Bush's Militarism and coauthor of The Breaking of the American Social Compact and Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare
"This collection fills a major gap in the literature on low income women and higher education, with particular emphasis on women on welfare and the policy history that has indeed shut them out." — Marilyn Gittell, Director of the Howard Samuels State Management and Policy Center at the City University of New York Graduate School
"Far from being disorganized, work-averse parasites, welfare moms are starting a revolution. They're going to college so they can get better jobs to make better lives for themselves and their children. This book tells us what we need to do to help them do it: Move over and get out of the way!" — Heidi Hartmann, President, Institute for Women's Policy Research