The Negro Family: The Case For National Action
The Negro Family: The Case For National Action, commonly known as the Moynihan Report, was a 1965 report on black poverty in the United States written by Daniel Patrick Moynihan, an American scholar serving as Assistant Secretary of Labor under President Lyndon B. Johnson and later to become a US Senator. Moynihan argued that the rise in black single-mother families was caused not by a lack of jobs, but by a destructive vein in ghetto culture, which could be traced to slavery times and continued discrimination in the American South under Jim Crow.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan in 1969
Daniel Patrick Moynihan was an American politician and diplomat. A member of the Democratic Party, he represented New York in the United States Senate from 1977 until 2001 after serving as an adviser to President Richard Nixon, and as the United States' ambassador to India and to the United Nations.
Moynihan in 1998
Moynihan in 1969
Image: Gravesite of United States Navy Lieutenant Daniel Moynihan in Section 36, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia on April 24, 2024 (cropped)