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Pushed to the Altar

The Right-Wing Roots of Marriage Promotion
Published on
January 1, 2008
Last Updated
June 21, 2019

Pushed to the Altar tells the story of how a right-wing A mass movement that seeks to transform society and challenge existing power relationships by means other than (but often including) the political electoral process. Learn more took power in the Bush administration and installed unproven anti-poverty policies to fulfill ideological valorization of the two-parent, heterosexual family.

The report by political scientist Jean Hardisty is the most comprehensive examination to date of the ideological roots of policies that incentivize marriage. Dr. Hardisty locates these initiatives within the context of the Right’s family values ideology and investigates their scope, scale, intellectual and operational origins, merits, and outcomes.

Even though there is no solid evidence from the social sciences that marriage results in a higher income for poor women, the Bush administration launched marriage promotion experiments that were funded at the expense of proven poverty relief programs.

Hardisty further develops this topic in her follow-up report, Marriage as a Cure for Poverty?

Authors

Jean Hardisty was PRA’s founder and president emerita, and had a Ph.D. in Political Science from Northwestern University. She was an activist for social justice issues for over 25 years and a well-known speaker and widely published author, especially on women’s rights and civil rights. In 1999, her book, Mobilizing Resentment, Conservative Resurgence from the John Birch Society to the Promise Keepers, was published by Beacon Press. She served on the boards of the Sister Fund, the Highlander Center, and the Women’s Community Cancer Project.