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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social groups & communities > Social classes
With a new introduction on the Ukraine crisis LONGLISTED FOR THE
FINANCIAL TIMES BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2022 A TIMES AND SUNDAY
TIMES BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2022 A DAILY MAIL BEST CURRENT
AFFAIRS BOOK OF 2022 A DAILY MIRROR BEST NON-FICTION BOOK OF 2022 A
SPECTATOR BOOK OF THE YEAR 2022 PRESENTER OF THE BBC RADIO 4 SERIES
'HOW TO STEAL A TRILLION' A WATERSTONES BEST POLITICS BOOK OF THE
YEAR 2022 AN IRISH TIMES NON-FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR 2022 How did
Britain become the servant of the world's most powerful and corrupt
men? From accepting multi-million pound tips from Russian
oligarchs, to the offshore tax havens, meet Butler Britain... In
his Sunday Times-bestselling expose, Oliver Bullough reveals how
the UK took up its position at the elbow of the worst people on
Earth: the oligarchs, kleptocrats and gangsters. Though the UK
prides itself on values of fair play and the rule of law, few
countries do more to frustrate global anti-corruption efforts. From
the murky origins of tax havens and gambling centres in the British
Virgin Islands and Gibraltar to the influence of oligarchs in the
British establishment, Butler to the World is the story of how we
became a nation of Jeeveses - and how it doesn't have to be this
way.
The book, Talking About Structural Inequalities in Everyday Life:
New Politics of Race in Groups, Organizations, and Social Systems,
provides critical attention to contemporary, innovative, and
cutting?edge issues in group, organizational, and social systems
that address the complexities of racialized structural inequalities
in everyday life. This book provides a comprehensive focus on
systemic, societal, and organizational functioning in a variety of
contexts in advancing the interdisciplinary fields of human
development, counseling, social work, education, public health,
multiculturalism/cultural studies, and organizational consultation.
One of the most fundamental aspects of this book engages readers in
the connection between theory and praxis that incorporates a
critical analytic approach to learning and the practicality of
knowledge. A critical emphasis examines how inequalities and power
relations manifest in groups, organizations, communities, and
social systems within societal contexts. In particular, suppressing
talk about racialized structural inequalities in the dominant
culture has traditionally worked to marginalize communities of
color. The subtle, barely visible, and sometimes unspeakable
behavioral practices involving these racialized dynamics are
explored. This scholarly book provides a valuable collection of
chapters for researchers, prevention experts, clinicians, and
policy makers, as well as research organizations, not?for?profit
organizations, clinical agencies, and advanced level undergraduate
and graduate courses focused on counseling, social work, education,
public health, organizational consultation and advocacy.
Ghettoes, Tramps, and Welfare Queens: Down & Out on the Silver
Screen explores how American movies have portrayed poor and
homeless people from the silent era to today. It provides a novel
kind of guide to social policy, exploring how ideas about poor and
homeless people have been reflected in popular culture and
evaluating those images against the historical and contemporary
reality. Richly illustrated and examining nearly 300 American-made
films released between 1902 and 2015, Ghettoes, Tramps, and Welfare
Queens finds and describes representations of poor and homeless
people and the places they have inhabited throughout the
century-long history of U.S. cinema. It moves beyond the merely
descriptive to deliberate whether cinematic representations of
homelessness and poverty changed over time, and if there are
patterns to be discerned. Ultimately, the text offers a preliminary
response to a handful of harder questions about causation and
consequence: Why are these portrayals as they are? Where do they
come from? Are they a reflection of American attitudes and policies
toward marginalized populations, or do they help create them? What
does this all mean for politics and policymaking? Of interest to
movie buffs and film scholars, cultural critics and historians,
policy analysts, and those curious to know more about homelessness
and American poverty, Ghettoes, Tramps, and Welfare Queens is a
unique window into American politics, history, policy, and culture
- it is an entertaining and enlightening journey.
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This volume provides a detailed study and assessment of social
movements among young Japanese from the late 1980s until the
present day. Discussing anti-war mobilizations, freeter unions,
artists in the homeless movement, campus protest, anti-nuclear
protest and activists engaged in support for social withdrawers,
the author documents how new forms of activism developed
hand-in-hand with experiments in using alternative spaces outside
mainstream public areas and a struggle with the traumatic legacy of
the failure of earlier protest movements. Despite the relative
absence of open protest during much of the 1990s, the author
demonstrates that this was an important preparatory period, full of
experimentation, in which the foundations for today's protest
movements were laid. This book will be welcomed by students of
sociological theory relating to Japan as well as those studying the
trends and dynamics of contemporary 'post-Bubble' Japanese society.
Who are those at the bottom of society? There has been much
discussion in recent years, on both Left and Right, about the
existence of an alleged 'underclass' in both Britain and the USA.
It has been claimed this group lives outside the mainstream of
society, is characterised by crime, suffers from long-term
unemployment and single parenthood, and is alienated from its core
values. John Welshman shows that there have always been concerns
about an 'underclass', whether constructed as the 'social residuum'
of the 1880s, the 'problem family' of the 1950s or the 'cycle of
deprivation' of the 1970s. There are marked differences between
these concepts, but also striking continuities. Indeed a concern
with an 'underclass' has in many ways existed as long as an
interest in poverty itself. This book is the first to look
systematically at the question, providing new insights into
contemporary debates about behaviour, poverty and welfare reform.
This new edition of the pioneering text has been updated throughout
and includes brand new chapters on 'Problem Families' and New
Labour as well as 'Troubled Families' and the Coalition Government.
It is a seminal work for anyone interested in the social history of
Britain and the Welfare State.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1968.
What if neoclassical economics addressed the question of class?
This accessible overview of economic theory launches this
investigation The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the economic
inequalities pervading every aspect of society-- and then
multiplied them to a staggering degree. A mere nine months into the
lockdown, the net worth of the infamous Forbes 400 increased by one
trillion dollars; In a single year the US poverty rate rose by the
largest amount ever since record-keeping began sixty years ago. At
the same time, mass unemployment imperiled or erased the fragile
right to quality health care for a substantial number of people
living in states without Medicaid. In Inequality, Class, and
Economics, Eric Schutz illumines the pillars undergirding the
monstrous polarities which define our times-- and reveals them as
the very same structures of power at the foundations of the class
system under today's capitalism. Employing both traditional and
novel approaches to public policy, Inequality, Class, and Economics
offers prescriptions that can genuinely address the steepening and
hardening of class boundaries. This book pushes past economists'
studied avoidance of the problem of class as a system of inequality
based in unequal opportunity, and exhorts us to tackle the heart of
the problem at long last.
Contributions by Phil Bevin, Blair Davis, Marc DiPaolo, Michele
Fazio, James Gifford, Kelly Kanayama, Orion Ussner Kidder,
Christina M. Knopf, Kevin Michael Scott, Andrew Alan Smith, and
Terrence R. Wandtke In comic books, superhero stories often depict
working-class characters who struggle to make ends meet, lead
fulfilling lives, and remain faithful to themselves and their own
personal code of ethics. Working-Class Comic Book Heroes: Class
Conflict and Populist Politics in Comics examines working-class
superheroes and other protagonists who populate heroic narratives
in serialized comic books. Essayists analyze and deconstruct these
figures, viewing their roles as fictional stand-ins for real-world
blue-collar characters. Informed by new working-class studies, the
book also discusses how often working-class writers and artists
created these characters. Notably Jack Kirby, a working-class
Jewish artist, created several of the most recognizable
working-class superheroes, including Captain America and the Thing.
Contributors weigh industry histories and marketing concerns as
well as the fan community's changing attitudes towards class
signifiers in superhero adventures. The often financially strapped
Spider-Man proves to be a touchstone figure in many of these
essays. Grant Morrison's Superman, Marvel's Shamrock, Alan Moore
and David Lloyd's V for Vendetta, and The Walking Dead receive
thoughtful treatment. While there have been many scholarly works
concerned with issues of race and gender in comics, this book
stands as the first to deal explicitly with issues of class,
cultural capital, and economics as its main themes.
During the tech boom, Silicon Valley became one of the most
concentrated zones of wealth polarization and social inequality in
the United States--a place with a fast-disappearing middle class,
persistent pockets of poverty, and striking gaps in educational and
occupational achievement along class and racial lines. Low-wage
workers and their families experienced a profound sense of
exclusion from the techno-entrepreneurial culture, while middle
class residents, witnessing up close the seemingly overnight
success of a "new entrepreneurial" class, negotiated both new and
seemingly unattainable standards of personal success and the
erosion of their own economic security.
"The Burdens of Aspiration" explores the imprint of the region's
success-driven public culture, the realities of increasing social
and economic insecurity, and models of success emphasized in
contemporary public schools for the region's working and middle
class youth. Focused on two disparate groups of
students--low-income, "at-risk" Latino youth attending a
specialized program exposing youth to high tech industry within an
"under-performing" public high school, and middle-income white and
Asian students attending a "high-performing" public school with
informal connections to the tech elite--Elsa Davidson offers an
in-depth look at the process of forming aspirations across lines of
race and class. By analyzing the successes and sometimes
unanticipated effects of the schools' attempts to shape the
aspirations and values of their students, she provides keen
insights into the role schooling plays in social reproduction, and
how dynamics of race and class inform ideas about responsible
citizenship that are instilled in America's youth.
After decades of the American "war on drugs" and relentless prison
expansion, political officials are finally challenging mass
incarceration. Many point to an apparently promising solution to
reduce the prison population: addiction treatment. In Addicted to
Rehab, Bard College sociologist Allison McKim gives an in-depth and
innovative ethnographic account of two such rehab programs for
women, one located in the criminal justice system and one located
in the private healthcare system-two very different ways of
defining and treating addiction. McKim's book shows how addiction
rehab reflects the race, class, and gender politics of the punitive
turn. As a result, addiction has become a racialized category that
has reorganized the link between punishment and welfare provision.
While reformers hope that treatment will offer an alternative to
punishment and help women, McKim argues that the framework of
addiction further stigmatizes criminalized women and undermines our
capacity to challenge gendered subordination. Her study ultimately
reveals a two-tiered system, bifurcated by race and class.
Traditionally academia has been seen as an elite profession, for
those with an academic background and from the middle/upper
classes. This is what makes the life of a working class academic
all the more interesting, rich and powerful. How have they become
who they are in an industry steeped in elitism? How have they
navigated their way, and what has the journey been like? Do they
continue to identify as working class or has their social
positioning and/or identities shifted? Iona Burnell Reilly presents
a collection of autoethnographies, written by working class
academics in higher education - how they got there, what their
journeys were like, what their experiences were, if they faced any
struggles, conflicts, prejudice and discrimination, and if they had
to, or still do, negotiate their identities. Told in their own
words the academics chart their journeys and explore their
experiences of becoming an academic while also coming from a
working class background. Although a working class heritage
under-pins the autoethnography of each of the writers, the
interlocking sections between class, race, gender and sexuality
will also be relevant.
Which were the mechanisms by which certain groups were positioned
at the margins of national narratives during the nineteenth
century, either via their exclusion from these narratives of
through their incorporation into them as 'others'? By engaging with
shifting ideas of exclusion and difference, the authors in this
book reflect upon the paradoxical centrality of the subaltern at a
time when literature was deployed as a tool for nation building.
The lasting presence of the Jewish and Moorish legacy, the
portrayal of gypsy characters, or the changing notions of
femininity in public discourse exemplify the ways in which images
of marginal 'types' played a central role in the configuration of
the very idea of Spanishness. ?Cuales fueron los mecanismos
mediante los que ciertos grupos fueron relegados a los margenes del
relato nacional durante el siglo XIX, bien a traves de su exclusion
de dichos relatos, bien a traves de su incorporacion a ellos como
"otros"? A traves del analisis de las ideas de exclusion y
diferencia, los autores de este libro reflexionan sobre la
paradojica centralidad de lo marginal en una epoca en la que la
literatura fue una herramienta fundamental para la construccion de
la nacion. La pervivencia del legado judio y morisco, la
representacion de personajes gitanos o las distintas nociones de
feminidad presentes en el discurso publico ejemplifican las formas
en que las imagenes de "tipos" marginales desempenaron un papel
central en la configuracion de la idea de espanolidad.
This book is an essential resource for anyone who wants to
understand race in America, drawing on research from a variety of
fields to answer frequently asked questions regarding race
relations, systemic racism, and racial inequality. This work is
part of a series that uses evidence-based documentation to examine
the veracity of claims and beliefs about high-profile issues in
American culture and politics. This particular volume examines the
true state of race relations and racial inequality in the United
States, drawing on empirical research in the hard sciences and
social sciences to answer frequently asked questions regarding race
and inequality. The book refutes falsehoods, misunderstandings, and
exaggerations surrounding these topics and confirms the validity of
other assertions. Assembling this empirical research into one
accessible place allows readers to better understand the scholarly
evidence on such high-interest topics as white privilege, racial
bias in criminal justice, media bias, housing segregation,
educational inequality, disparities in employment, racial
stereotypes, and personal attitudes about race and ethnicity in
America. The authors draw from scholarly research in biology,
genetics, medicine, sociology, psychology, anthropology, and
economics (among many other fields) to answer these questions, and
in doing so they provide readers with the information to enter any
conversation about American race relations in the 21st century as
informed citizens. Addresses beliefs and claims regarding race and
ethnicity in America in an easy-to-navigate question-and-answer
format Draws from empirical research in a variety of scholarly
fields and presents those findings in a single, lay-friendly
location to aid understanding of complex issues Provides readers
with leads to conduct further research in extensive Further Reading
sections for each entry Examines claims made by individuals and
groups of all political backgrounds and ideologies
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