Poor Laws and Public Justice: Legal Histories of Poverty Relief and Punishment
MTA
How law shaped who deserved aid, criminalized survival tactics, and regulated poor relief
2nd Edition
*Poor Laws and Public Justice: Legal Histories of Poverty Relief and Punishment* provides a comprehensive examination of how the law has historically categorized, managed, and disciplined the poor. Tracing the evolution of relief from the English parish system and Elizabethan Poor Laws to the American New Deal and modern welfare reforms, the book illustrates a persistent legal dichotomy between the "deserving" and "undeserving" poor. It argues that poverty relief has rarely been a matter of unconditional support; instead, it has functioned as a tool of social control, often conditioning aid on moral conformity, labor discipline, and the surrender of privacy.
The narrative explores how legal mechanisms like the workhouse, vagrancy statutes, and settlement laws were used to restrict mobility and enforce labor. It further details how these structures intersected with racial capitalism and gendered family ideals, notably through post-Civil War Black Codes, convict leasing, and "suitable home" rules. In the contemporary era, the text analyzes the criminalization of survival tactics—such as panhandling and public camping—and the rise of the "digital poorhouse," where automated algorithms and surveillance technologies replace human discretion with opaque, data-driven gatekeeping that continues to marginalize vulnerable populations.
Ultimately, the book frames the history of poverty law as a constant struggle between punitive governance and rights-based advocacy. While the welfare rights movement of the 1960s established significant procedural protections, subsequent shifts toward workfare and fiscal sanctions have reasserted a logic of suspicion. The work concludes by proposing a framework for "Public Justice," advocating for a transition away from moralized gatekeeping toward a system of enforceable legal entitlements—such as guaranteed minimum income, housing, and healthcare—anchored in human dignity rather than behavioral compliance.
This book is essential reading for lawyers specializing in poverty law, welfare rights, or civil rights who need to understand the legal foundations of contemporary benefit systems. Historians and scholars examining the intersection of law, poverty, and social policy will find valuable insights into how legal categories have shaped lived experiences. Advocates and organizers working on economic justice, housing security, or criminal justice reform will discover historical strategies for reframing cases around rights rather than suspicion. Students in law, history, sociology, or public policy studying the evolution of welfare states will gain a comprehensive understanding of the legal architecture of poverty relief and punishment.
January 20, 2026
123,554 words
8 hours 39 minutes
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