Breaking the Intergenerational Cycle of Child Poverty,
Apr
05
According to the National Academy of Sciences, the answer is multi-faceted and includes physical and mental health of the mother and child, access to family planning services, availability of high-quality childcare and education provided by diverse teachers, access to higher education, stable housing, tax, and benefits assistance and more. In this webinar, featuring leaders of CPAL and Center for Transforming Lives, you will be reminded of the importance of a two-generational model to break the cycle of poverty, what mental health has to do with economic mobility, how to effectively utilize partnerships to contribute to sustainable change and why location matters.