What if we reclaimed the word "welfare" as "well-being" and designed our systems accordingly?
We've inherited a welfare story that was never truly about well-being. Over generations, cultural myths about poverty, merit, and personal responsibility hardened into policies that still shape people's lives and the health of our democracy. They've taught us who is worthy of help and who is not, who belongs and who is blamed, who is seen and who is pushed to the margins.
And yet the systems we call "welfare" are not peripheral. They are the quiet architecture of democracy: the supports that shape whether people can meet basic needs, weather life's storms, and imagine a future marked by stability and possibility. They show up in child and family supports, food and housing assistance, behavioral health care, aging and disability services, and in the community organizations that knit these systems together.
In American Welfare: Reclaiming the Dream for All of U.S., Tracy Evans invites readers to look beneath policy debates and political rhetoric to the deeper narratives that built America's welfare system-and continue to limit what we believe is possible.
Drawing on history, social science, and decades of leadership in public human services, Evans takes readers behind the scenes of the programs and structures that quietly shape daily life for millions of people. She traces how ideas rooted in the English Poor Laws, slavery, and moral judgments about worth hardened into modern myths of meritocracy, blame, and inevitability. These myths, she argues, have distorted our understanding of poverty and weakened our democracy.
But this is not a book about failure.
It is a book about design - and redesign.
Across three sections, American Welfare reframes human services as democratic infrastructure: the often invisible systems that influence whether people can meet basic needs, weather life's unexpected storms, and imagine a future marked by stability and possibility. Evans shows how these systems can harm through stigma, scarcity, and exclusion, but also how they can heal when intentionally designed for trust, belonging, and shared well-being.
In the final section, the book looks forward. Facing today's converging forces-polarization, technological disruption, climate displacement, and economic insecurity-Evans asks what kind of democracy we want to build next. She offers practical principles for changing the stories we tell, strengthening public trust, and designing systems that allow more people to thrive.
At its core, American Welfare makes a bold and hopeful claim: the strength of a democracy can be measured by how well its people fare.
Reclaiming welfare in its original sense-the condition of faring well-means reclaiming the American Dream itself. Not as a promise reserved for some, but as a shared project we build together.
This book is an invitation to see our systems clearly, to question inherited narratives, and to imagine what becomes possible when we choose design over destiny.
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