The Other Wes Moore Sparknotes

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Easton Scott Dan Richardson May 2, 2024. Systemic Poverty in The Other Wes Moore. In The Other Wes Moore by Wes Moore, profound insights into the systemic issues plaguing communities of color, particularly in cities like Baltimore, are evident. The book shows the effects poverty can have on young, specifically Black, men in America. This inequity in Baltimore can be seen in data from outside sources: “How parents shape socioeconomic diversity within early childhood programs” by Rachel Demma shows how poverty affects children at an early age; Ludmila Wikkeling-Scott’s “The effects of COVID-19 on African American communities in Baltimore's health enterprise zones: a mixed-methods examination.” tells how the COVID-19 pandemic revealed disparities in …show more content…

Through the parallel narratives of two young men named Wes Moore, the book illustrates how systemic factors such as limited access to quality education, economic opportunities, and positive role models allow cycles of poverty and injustice to continue. Both boys’ lack of a positive paternal role model emphasizes the cyclical nature of poverty in Baltimore neighborhoods, where historical and contemporary forms of discrimination have magnified socioeconomic disparities. Poverty, lack of education, and especially poor access to medicine are common. “Multiple studies have documented extreme differences in quality of life, morbidity and mortality when comparing persons of different racial and ethnic backgrounds, and of socioeconomic classes,” says doctor and public health researcher Ludmila Wikkeling-Scott (2). This means a lack of contraceptives and a lack of sexual education, which can be seen in The Other Wes Moore: “I learned about girls getting periods not from biology class but from my friend Paris” (79). This is also very apparent when Wes John Moore becomes a father as an adolescent. Inequities like these often lead to men in these

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