Abstract
This article examines the community-based work of women from low income neighborhoods who were hired by the anti-poverty programs established by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. This examination reveals the ways in which gendered assumptions, gender-differentiated policies, and the gender division of labor inform the organization of the state. It also demonstrates how the gender subtext of the state can serve as a site for resistance. As the community workers brought their previous unpaid work experience into their state supported jobs, they challenged the assumptions of the state that included (1) narrow interpretations of community needs, (2) bureaucratic organization and reliance on credentialed knowledge as a basis for decision-making, (3) separation of political action from state provisions of social welfare, and (4) a limited definition of labor. The workers' resistance reveals the contradictions of state-sponsored, community-based employment of women from low income communities.

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