Broxton began her work by volunteering as an activist with the organization overseeing the research in 2013. She was eventually hired in 2016 as national coordinator of the United States research team at the outset of the MAP study.
She trained facilitators and managed peer groups so researchers could document aspects of poverty firsthand, traveling to locations including New Orleans, Oakland and Appalachia. In all, 23 peer groups were interviewed across the country.
Her team released the final report in March, titled “Pushed to the Bottom: The Experience of Poverty in the U.S.,” which contains detailed findings and new insights into poverty.
“Perhaps surprisingly, the data revealed that a lack of money was not the first thing peer groups mentioned,” says Broxton. “Poverty is a constellation of factors that leave you without a voice or access to adequate healthcare and resources, and that creates employment-related hardships and a sense of shame through stigma and isolation.”
“Poverty goes much deeper than just income level,” Broxton and her co-authors write in the report. “Poverty means having to swallow your pride when accessing a much-needed subsidy, knowing that your children are not receiving the same quality education as their peers, being trapped in a run-down community that lacks resources, being told to be grateful for the little bit you do have and being shamed if you are not.” The report asserts that “poverty in the United States is shaped by features of our culture and values that create a structural process of subjugation.”
Broxton and the team of researchers have presented their work at the United Nations in New York and in other major cities around the country, as well as at the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris. They are developing a social worker training from the results that can be adapted for anyone who works with vulnerable populations.
"Maryann’s work with this project brings a much-needed spotlight on the domestic and transnational issue of poverty," says Lesley social work professor Josh Baldwin. "It's particularly exciting that her work in this area began in our Research Methods course with an investigation of food deserts. I am thrilled to see how far she has expanded her work in the critical study of poverty and how her research project will benefit current and future social work practitioners."
From high school dropout to research director
Broxton’s route to becoming a poverty researcher was circuitous.
She dropped out of Everett High School in the ninth grade. She earned her General Education Development (GED) at 17 and went to hairdressing school four years later. In her 20s, she worked as a stylist and held various office jobs in the Boston area, struggling to support herself and her family.
“While working at a temp job, I had the thought one day that this is not how I want to spend the rest of my life — that I would just waste away if I didn’t leave,” she recalls. “I knew I was capable of doing more and needed a better way of supporting my family.”
She went back to school at 35, completing her associate’s degree at Bunker Hill Community College (BHCC).
“I originally thought I would obtain a secretarial degree or become a paralegal, but once I was at BHCC I discovered how much I loved the education process,” she says.
She transferred to Lesley, enrolling through our Center for the Adult Learner and earning her bachelor’s degree in liberal studies in 2016.
“I was really interested in the courses at Lesley, and I was interested in social justice issues and policy, and how the two were intertwined throughout history to create some of the conditions that exist for people today,” says Broxton.
The experience was transformative.
“Lesley allowed me to craft a program that made sense to me, incorporating my work and my school life,” she says. “I don’t think I would have appreciated college the way I did as an adult student, and my advisor Gene Ferraro was my personal cheerleader.”