Research School for Economic and Social History

Agenda

2 June 2025
13:45
Radboud University, Aula, Comeniuslaan 2, Nijmegen
tba

PhD Defence Posthumus alumna Heleen Blommers

On 2 June 2025, Posthumus alumna Heleen Blommers will defend the PhD thesis ‘Deconstructing the War on Poverty: why a failure narrative became entrenched in American political discourse, 1964–1974’ at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Supervisors are Professor Karel Davids (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Dr Dienke Hondius (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), and Professor Damian Pargas (Leiden University).

Heleen’s dissertation focuses on the War on Poverty, a large-scale domestic anti-poverty program in the United States in the 1960s. Soon after the program was launched in 1964, it was criticized from both left and right and by the mid-1980s, the general narrative had become that the War on Poverty failed. Today, historians and economists argue that the anti-poverty program was actually quite effective in various ways. Yet, the idea that the War on Poverty failed is still entrenched.

The dissertation answers the question why and how the failure narrative of the War on Poverty came into being in the United States. It looks at the implementation of the program on the ground in Georgia, eastern Kentucky and Baltimore and analyzes how local controversies developed into a general belief of failure.

It shows that that not only conservative resentments about the program, but also the discontent of the poor themselves and of a diverse group of people helping to fight the War on Poverty existed. Their frustrations were rooted in conflicting interests and existing ideas about the deservingness of the poor and culminated into a failure narrative.

The N.W. Posthumus Institute wishes Heleen a successful defence!