Once you look at the empirical realities—and Simon Black knows the realities—there is a glaring contradiction in the contemporary North American welfare state system between its reliance on workfare-style programs on the one hand and its near-neglect of childcare provisions for the families swept into these programs on the other hand. Black exposes and explains the empirical realities of these policies and then subjects them to a brilliant theoretical analysis. A fine book that casts light on a major feature of contemporary welfare policy.