![]() ![]() What she figured out was that the composition of poverty was changing. It’s a bit overwhelming, but I’m feeling my anger level rising, so I better figure something out.” When she got back to her home in Virginia, she emailed me, “I’m ready to look over my notes and see where I’ve gotten to. She also traveled to Detroit, Dallas, Baltimore, Saint Louis, Racine, Wisconsin, Wilmington, Delaware, and New York, talking with low-income people as well as with poverty researchers and activists. She visited Los Angeles, where I introduced her to community, tenants’ rights, and union organizers. In 2009, as a deep recession triggered an epidemic of layoffs and foreclosures, the New York Times asked Barbara Ehrenreich to write a series of articles about poverty in the United States. ![]()
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