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The second edition of this strong collection brings together
classical statements on social stratification with current and
original scholarship, providing a foundation for theoretical debate
on the nature of race, class, and gender inequality. Designed for
students in courses on social stratification, inequality, and
social theory, this new edition includes a revised and updated
editor's introduction and conclusion, along with five new chapters
on race and gender from distinguished scholars in the field.
The second edition of this strong collection brings together
classical statements on social stratification with current and
original scholarship, providing a foundation for theoretical debate
on the nature of race, class, and gender inequality. Designed for
students in courses on social stratification, inequality, and
social theory, this new edition includes a revised and updated
editor's introduction and conclusion, along with five new chapters
on race and gender from distinguished scholars in the field.
As Mr Petersen points out in this study, since the war there has
been a very strong belief in the Netherlands that emigration is
necessary. Even those who never before occupied themselves with
these matters now speak of the large natural increase, the
overpopulation, and the lack of opportunities in the Netherlands.
Thousands are considering the possibility of leaving their home
land and creating a new existence for themselves overseas. It is a
mistake to suppose, however, that these ideas stem from the special
demographic and economic conditions that arose in the Netherlands
since the war; the opposite is the case. From this point of view,
there has never been less reason for emigrating during the past
decades than in these postwar years. As far as the demographic
situation is concerned, by 1930 the natural increase had decreased
markedly as compared with the preceding decades, so that the number
of young persons entering the labor market after the war has been
relatively small. On the other hand, there have been more openings
in industry and in other sectors of the economy than ever before,
so that unemploy ment pretty much disappeared. Only in 1951 did it
again become at all significant."
This collection of eighteen papers and eleven commentaries by noted
economists, demographers, and sociologists, combines systematic
discussions of the demographic effects of below-replacement
fertility with efforts to explain its social origins, to determine
the likely societal consequences and to assess potential policy
responses.
Contributing Authors Include Milos Macura, G. Gouswaard, Olaf
Boustedt, And Many Others.
Additional Authors Include Lois Pratt, Samuel Pratt And Natalie
Rogoff.
Contributing Authors Include Harrison Brown, Norman B. Ryder,
Mortimer Spiegelman, And Many Others. The Annals Of The American
Academy Of Political And Social Science, V316.
Contributing Authors Include Milos Macura, G. Gouswaard, Olaf
Boustedt, And Many Others.
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