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Understanding America's Gun Culture focuses on building
understanding of some of the issues associated with U.S. gun
culture and the contemporary debate about the availability and use
of guns. This edited volume is unique in that it draws on a wide
variety of disciplines and presents perspectives on both sides of
the debate. Contributors hail from the academic disciplines of
history, social work, criminal justice, sociology, religion, and
theological ethics as well as policy agencies. Some chapters
examine the issues social-psychologically to help readers better
understand dynamics within the debate. Others pose important
ethical and philosophical questions about gun culture. Still others
address practical policy solutions for enhancing gun safety and
minimizing gun violence, even bringing in international
perspectives. This second edition includes literature published in
the last two years and two new chapters, one focusing on gender
within gun culture and another that features a conversation between
the editors and an ethnographic researcher with broad expertise in
gun culture and research and policy trends. Together, the chapters
create a thought-provoking compilation that offers insightful
findings, considers theoretical and practical implications, and
invites further exploration of the topic.
Understanding America's Gun Culture focuses on building
understanding of some of the issues associated with US gun culture
and the contemporary debate about the availability and use of guns.
This edited volume is unique in that it draws on a wide variety of
disciplines and presents perspectives on both sides of the debate.
Contributors hail from the academic disciplines of history, social
work, criminal justice, sociology, religion, and theological ethics
as well as policy agencies. Some chapters examine the issues
social-psychologically to help readers better understand dynamics
within the debate. Others pose important ethical and philosophical
questions about gun culture. Still others address practical policy
solutions for enhancing gun safety and minimizing gun violence,
even bringing in international perspectives. Together, the chapters
create a thought-provoking compilation that offers insightful
findings, considers theoretical and practical implications, and
invites further exploration of the topic.
Organizations and U.S. workers across the life course indicate
increased interest in flexible work arrangements. More
organizations have flexibility on the books, but rates of
utilization remain low, and both workers and organizations note
operational challenges and concerns. Noticing the commonality of
these experiences across organizational settings and the need for
more in-depth examination of workplace structure and culture not
limited to circumstances immediately surrounding flexibility, Lisa
Fisher set out to identify specific elements of the structure and
culture of work that impeded flexibility in an organization that
had a history of struggle with it. Using interviews and
non-participant observation to conduct a qualitative case study,
she found that the struggle, happening on the ground within the
daily processes of work, was not the result of unsupportive
management or overly-cautious employees. Instead, she found
evidence of something much more powerful and all-encompassing: a
system of silence surrounding flexibility. Fisher begins the book
with a thoughtful account of the history and current state of
flexibility in the U.S. within a framework that considers changing
demographics, organizational perspectives, neoliberalism,
globalization and lingering problems with how we think about
flexibility. She then provides an in-depth analysis of the
structure and culture of work at the organization studied, which
culminates in a model specifying the workings of the system of
silence as a phenomenon nested within the work environment and
larger cultural ideas about work and workers. Fisher shows how
things assumed to be unrelated to flexibility can still have
bearing on the ways that an organization understands and approaches
it. She thereby develops a rich, informative account of struggle
and resilience, change and adaptation, confusion and sense-making,
and obstacles and pathways, an account which suggests important
theoretical implications and provides practical tips for
organizations that are serious about flexibility.
Understanding America’s Gun Culture focuses on building
understanding of some of the issues associated with US gun culture
and the contemporary debate about the availability and use of guns.
This edited volume is unique in that it draws on a wide variety of
disciplines and presents perspectives on both sides of the debate.
Contributors hail from the academic disciplines of history, social
work, criminal justice, sociology, religion, and theological ethics
as well as policy agencies. Some chapters examine the issues
social-psychologically to help readers better understand dynamics
within the debate. Others pose important ethical and philosophical
questions about gun culture. Still others address practical policy
solutions for enhancing gun safety and minimizing gun violence,
even bringing in international perspectives. Together, the chapters
create a thought-provoking compilation that offers insightful
findings, considers theoretical and practical implications, and
invites further exploration of the topic.
The Bill Fisher Story relates the life of an average working man
and how, at the age of 72, he started investing in a three pronged
strategy, and was able to accumulate a net worth of 1 million
dollars in 18 years. The book is an inspirational guide for Baby
Boomers, who experienced the great recession of 2008-1010, and lost
as much as 50 percent of their net worth in the real estate and
financial crash. The book has an easy to follow plan for Baby
Boomers to control their own retirement destiny by following Bill
Fisher's philosophy.
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