What works in helping the poor?
Which anti-poverty policies actually work?
Before Robert Doar became a scholar who studies public policy, he was a practitioner who implemented it. Under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Doar oversaw the nation’s largest social services agency.
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Read more from Robert Doar. Robert Doar is a bold advocate for antipoverty policy that actually works. In “Where’s the Outrage?,” he takes economists to task for their complacency in the face of an ongoing human tragedy. In “The Path to Responsibility Can Start With a Broom and a Paycheck,” he shares on-the-ground stories from one of New York City’s most successful job-training outfits. And in “10 Welfare Reform Lessons,” Doar lists the top ten principles he gleaned from his successful career in government.
Hear what other new voices are saying. Leading voices in Washington, D.C. are talking about opportunity in new and counter-intuitive ways. Michael Strain argues that struggling Americans deserve “more than the minimum wage,”and offers better policy ideas in its place. Arthur Brooks challenges everyone, whatever line of work we’re in, to ask how our job can be a helping profession. And in this popular YouTube playlist, Brooks asks Bill Gates all the big questions about the future of fighting poverty.
Roll up your sleeves. Public policy is very important. But when is the last time you personally gave of yourself to others? Every single one of us can probably afford to dedicate a little more of our time, our talents, or our treasure to the service of people who need our help. Whether through charitable donations or regular volunteering, we have the power to change lives today.