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First published in 1957, The Family Life of Old People opens with
the question: Are old people isolated from their families?
Thereafter, the author describes the results of intensive
interviews with people of pensionable age in Bethnal Green in East
London. Part one shows that most people are members of closely-knit
extended families of three generations, often living in separate
households in adjoining streets. The life of these families is of
absorbing interest and the social structure of the home, the system
of family care and the domestic, economic and social relationships
between husbands and their wives, and between old people and their
children and brothers and sisters, are carefully analysed. Part two
discusses the social problems of old age against this background.
This book will be of interest to students of sociology and
gerontology.
When originally published in 1988, this book presented new evidence
of inequalities in health found among communities in different
areas of the North of England. It relates this evidence to
long-term trends taking place in patterns of health in Britain as a
whole and explores how far health inequalities can be explained by
variations in material deprivation. The book provides a detailed
examination of the correlation between health and wealth, or
ill-health and deprivation in Britain in the 20th century but the
book has an enduring relevance as the Covid Pandemic has once again
shown that regional disparities in wealth have profound outcomes
for health. The book is of significance for health professionals,
social services and those planner and politicians concerned with
levelling up.
First published in 1964, The Last Refuge originated from the
author's visit to a Victorian workhouse which had become an
Institution for old people. A visit that was to show frightful
overcrowding in sparsely furnished dormitories. Day-rooms bleak and
uninviting in which sat watery-eyed and feeble men, their spirit
and pride drained away by the hopelessness of the surroundings. The
many unexpected conditions Professor Townsend found led him to
undertake this major enquiry into the question "Are communal homes
for the aged necessary in our community and if so, what form should
they take?" Visits were paid to a random sample of 173 residential
institutions and homes, and welfare officers, matrons and elderly
residents were interviewed. The general conclusion was that
communal homes of the kind that existed in England and Wales did
not adequately meet the physical, psychological and social needs of
the old people living in them and required immediate alternative
services and living arrangements. This book will be of interest to
students of sociology, social care, public policy and gerontology.
First published in 1993. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Robert and Helen Lynd's "Middletown" set the format in
sociological theory and practice for hundreds of studies in the
decades following its publication in 1929. "Old People in Three
Industrial Societies" may well set similar standards for studies in
its field for many years to come. In addition to achieving a
significant breakthrough in the progress of sociological research
techniques, the book offers a monumental cross-cultural exposition
of the health, family relationships, and social and economic status
of the aged in three countries-the United States, Britain, and
Denmark.
The accumulated data of this survey put to the acid test many of
the stereotyped notions about the situation of the elderly: for
example, that most old people are isolated from their families as
well as from the society at large; that most old people want to
continue to work and are barred from employment only because of
prejudices against them in industry and because of fixed retirement
and pension ages; that all old people live in poor economic
conditions. Besides rectifying views held by many social
scientists, this pathbreaking work provides empirically based
answers to numerous questions regarding important features of
aging, which can be studied irrespective of the broader national
and social patterns that surround them.
A truly collaborative survey conducted in three countries by a
team of sociologists and economists working from a similar point of
view and with common methods, the book gives the newest information
and viewpoints in this important field. This makes it mandatory
reading and an invaluable aid for all involved in the study,
treatment, and counseling of the aged. "Old People in Three
Industrial Societies," will be a valuable guide for all social
research underlying the development and implementation of social
policy.
Technological progress comes with a Dark Side where good ideas and
intentions produce undesirable results. The many and various
unexpected outcomes of technology span humorous to bizarre, and
even result in situations which threaten our survival. Development
can be positive for some, but negative and isolating for others
(e.g. older or poorer people). Progress is often transient, as
faster electronics and computers dramatically shorten retention
time of data and knowledge (e.g. documents, data, and photos will
be unreadable within a generation). This is also destroying past
languages and cultures in a trend to globalisation. Advances cut
across all areas of science and life, and the scope is vast from
biology, medicine, agriculture, transport, electronics, computers,
long range communications, to a global economy. Our reliance on
technology is now matched by vulnerability to natural events (e.g.
intense sunspot activity) which could annihilate advanced societies
by destroying satellites or power grid distribution. Similarly,
progress of electronics and communication produced a boom industry
in cyber crime, and cyber terrorism. Medical technology may
maintain our health, but we ignore possible drug related mutagenic
changes, and we continue with errors in creating a global food
economy by devastating the environment and causing extinction of
species, just to support an excessive human population. This
diverse coverage of the book is consciously presented at a level
designed for an intelligent, but non-scientific readership. It
includes suggestions for positive future progress with planning,
investment, and political commitment, as well as contemplating how
failure to respond endangers human survival.
This is a survey of the author's work on the subject of
international poverty, covering his contribution to the debate on
the conceptualization and measurement of poverty. The theoretical
sections of the book are illustrated with more empirical
observations about trends in poverty in both Third and First World
contexts. The book also defines the poverty line, looks at
international concepts of poverty and examines cases in India,
Kenya, Europe and the UK.
Robert and Helen Lynd's Middletown set the format in sociological
theory and practice for hundreds of studies in the decades
following its publication in 1929. Old People in Three Industrial
Societies may well set similar standards for studies in its fi eld
for many years to come. In addition to achieving a signifi cant
breakthrough in the progress of socio logical research techniques,
the book offers a monumental cross-cultural exposition of the
health, family relationships, and social and economic status of the
aged in three countries-the United States, Britain, and Denmark.
The results of this report from a major international research
project, funded by UNICEF, on child rights and child poverty in the
developing world are shocking. They show that over one billion
children - more than half the children in developing countries -
suffer from severe deprivation of basic human need and over a third
(674 million) suffer from absolute poverty. The study's findings
indicate that considerably more emphasis needs to be placed on
improving basic infrastructure and social services for families
with children, particularly with regards to shelter, sanitation and
safe drinking water in rural areas. Anti-poverty strategies need to
respond to local conditions, as blanket solutions to eradicating
child poverty will be unsuccessful. (REPORT)
World poverty is an important book offering fresh insights into how
to tackle poverty worldwide. With contributions from leading
scholars in the field both internationally and in the UK, the book
asks whether existing international and national policies are
likely to succeed in reducing poverty across the world. It
concludes that they are not and that a radically different
international strategy is needed. This book is a companion volume
to Breadline Europe: The measurement of poverty (The Policy Press,
2001). The focus of World poverty is on anti-poverty policies
rather than the scale, causes and measurement of poverty. A wide
range of countries is discussed including countries such as China
and India, which have rarely been covered elsewhere. The interests
of the industrialised and developing world are given equal
attention and are analysed together. Policies intended to operate
at different levels - international, regional, national and
sub-national - ranging from the policies of international agencies
like the UN and the World Bank through to national governments,
groups of governments and local and city authorities - are
examined. Key aspects of social policy, like 'targeting' and
means-testing, de-regulation and privatisation, are considered in
detail. World poverty will become a definitive point of reference
for anyone working, studying or researching in the poverty field.
Studies in poverty, inequality and social exclusion series Series
Editor: David Gordon, Director, Townsend Centre for International
Poverty Research. Poverty, inequality and social exclusion remain
the most fundamental problems that humanity faces in the 21st
century. This exciting series, published in association with the
Townsend Centre for International Poverty Research at the
University of Bristol, aims to make cutting-edge poverty related
research more widely available. For other titles in this series,
please follow the series link from the main catalogue page.
Since 1990, the World Bank, most of the other international
agencies and an increasing number of governments have committed
themselves to the eradication of poverty. But the basis of their
work badly needs overhaul and concerted verification. Breadline
Europe provides a scientific and international basis for the
analysis and reduction of poverty. It demonstrates that there is
far more important research into the problem of poverty going on in
many countries of Europe than the international agencies and
national governments admit or even realise. Knowledge of the major
scientific advances in research needs to be spread among other
countries within as well as outside Europe. Breadline Europe has
been written by a number of leading European poverty researchers
and has three main themes: the need for a scientific poverty line:
for better definition and measurement of what is the biggest and
rapidly growing international social problem; the need for better
theories distinguishing between poverty and social exclusion, with
the corresponding policies calculated to diminish these
problems;the need for better international social policy and for
better policy-related analyses of poverty: for more exact analysis
of the year-by-year contribution of specific policies to poverty.
This is the first book to examine poverty in Europe within the
international framework agreed at the 1995 World Summit on Social
Development. Breadline Europe provides up-to-date, essential
reading for social science undergraduates and postgraduate
students. It will also be of considerable interest to policy makers
and NGOs with a concern for poverty reduction.
This book contains mainly a selection of papers that were presented
at the International Workshop on High Performance Computing/or
Computer Graphics and Visualisation, held in Swansea, United
Kingdom on 3-4 July 1995. The workshop was sponsored by the HEFCWI
Initiative on *Parallel Computing - Foundations and Applications*,
and it has provided the international computer graphics community
with a platform for: * assessing and reviewing the impact of the
development of high performance computing on the progress of
computer graphics and visualisation; * presenting the current use
of high performance computing architecture and software tools in
computer graphics and visualisation, and the development of
parallel graphics algorithms; * identifying potential high
performance computing applications in computer graphics and
visualisation, and encouraging members of the graphics community to
think about their problems from the perspective of parallelism. The
book is divided into six sections. The first section, which acts as
the introduction of the book, gives an overview of the current
state of the art It contains a comprehensive survey, by Whitman, of
parallel algorithms for computer graphics and visualisation; and a
discussion, by Hansen, on the past, present and future high
performance computing applications in computer graphics and
visualisation. The second section is focused on the design and
implementation of high performance architecture, software tools and
algorithms for surface rendering.
The Evolution of Music by Culture and Science aims to recognise the
impact of science on music, why it occurs, how we respond, and even
to tentatively see if we can predict future developments.
Technology has played an immense role in the development of music
as it has enabled the production of new sounds, introduced new
instruments and continuously improved and modified existing ones.
Printing, musical notation, and modern computer aids to
composition, plus recordings and electronic transmission have
equally enabled us to have access to music from across the world.
Such changes, whether just more powerful pianos, or new sounds as
from the saxophone, have inspired composers and audiences alike.
Acoustics and architecture play similar roles as they changed the
scale and performance of concert halls, and with the advent of
electronics, they enabled vast pop music festivals. No aspect of
modern music making has been untouched by the synergy with
scientific innovation. This is not a one-way interaction as the
early attempts to make recordings were a major motivating force to
design the electronics for amplifiers and these in turn inspired
and enabled the designs of semiconductor electronics and modern
computer technology. To appreciate the impact of technology on
music does not require any prior scientific background as the
concepts are invariably extremely simple and are presented here
without technical detail. Understanding music and why we like
different genres is far more complex, as this involves our personal
background and taste. Both aspects change with time, and there is
no contradiction in enjoying items as diverse as baroque madrigals,
symphonies, jazz or pop music, or music from totally different
cultures.
It may be surprising to focus on and praise imperfection, but, in
reality, perfection is a fiction. Every aspect of our technologies
is based on understanding and exploiting imperfections in the
materials we use. Imperfections are key to our use of metals,
glass, electronics, computers, optical fibres, and building
materials. Catalysis, as used throughout chemical industries, is
dependent on imperfections, as are a wide range of modern advances
in biology and medicine. This book provides examples in each area
that are readily understandable to non-scientists but also aim to
offer a far deeper insight into how the technologies and
disciplines advance and operate. However, once we change our focus
from idealised perfection to reality, the implications can extend
far beyond the realm of the sciences. The second part of the book
examines the importance of our ability to recognise and adapt to
imperfections in such wide-ranging areas as cookery, successful
career development, love, life, and the survival of humanity. Using
a broad range of accessible examples, this book aims to give
readers the tools to recognize technological imperfections and
apply those lessons to improving several key aspects of our lives,
crucially enabling them to define a world that will survive current
excesses and environmental destruction.
This book both celebrates and commemorates the last four dramatic
years of steam, recording both working locomotives, shed scenes and
a selected number of routes, many of which closed during the period
of examination, by way of illustrating the disappearing steam age
railway. The views are nostalgic, poignant and cannot be repeated.
This was the year of the wedding of Charles and Diana, Ronald
Reagan became the 40th President of the USA. On the railways the
Tyne & Wear Metro opened, the HST network was expanding and
loco-hauled passenger trains were on the decline.
1975 was the year in which Margaret Thatcher defeated Edward Heath
to become leader of the Conservative Party, Charlie Chaplin was
knighted by the Queen and the Vietnam War ended with the fall of
Saigon. On the railways, two major accidents at Moorgate and
Nuneaton resulted in considerable loss of life, and the prototype
High Speed Train reached speeds in excess of 150mph on the London
to Bristol main line.
Even in 1973 much of the steam infrastructure was still to be
found, but as modernisation took hold diesels were being joined by
electric locomotives in increasing numbers. This was the height of
the 'loco-hauled' era on the main line. In the wider world hostages
were taken at the Olympic Games, and President Nixon visited China.
THE REMARKABLE LIFE OF PETER TOWNSEND, THE MAN CONSIDERED TO BE THE
GREAT LOVE OF PRINCESS MARGARET'S LIFE, EQUERRY TO KING GEORGE VI
AND HERO OF THE BATTLE OF BRITAIN. 'A Royal fairy tale' Sunday
Telegraph 'One of the saddest love stories of modern times' The
Scotsman 'One afternoon, at Windsor Castle, when everyone had gone
to London for some ceremony, we talked, in the red drawing-room,
for hours - about ourselves. It was then that we made the mutual
discovery of how much we meant to one another. She listened,
without uttering a word, as I told her, very quietly, of my
feelings. Then she simply said: "That is exactly how I feel, too."
It was, to us both, an immensely gladdening disclosure, but one
which sorely troubled us.' The romance between Princess Margaret
and Group Captain Peter Townsend in the 1950s rocked the British
Establishment, pulled at the heartstrings of a nation and brought
sorrow to two intensely human individuals. In Time and Chance,
Peter Townsend tells his side of the story in intensely personal
terms, and places the episode within the whole context of his full
and varied life, a story which includes great heroism in World War
II as well as his part in one of the most publicised love stories
of the twentieth century.
In May 1940, Group Captain Peter Townsend took command of 85
Squadron, tasked with preparing it for the defence of Great Britain
against German bombers. It was the beginning of the long, hot,
lethal summer in which the RAF and the Luftwaffe fought to the
death over England in the furious conflict which ultimately saved
Britain from Nazi invasion. DUEL OF EAGLES, Townsend's gripping
account of the Battle of Britain, is widely acknowledged as the
classic account of this desperate, defining clash. Townsend tells
the story of dogfights in the sky from the perspectives of pilots
on both sides - including his own - and traces the background of
the conflict, from the years of secret preparation in Germany
following the end of the First World War to the ruthless political
manoeuvres played out on the ground in England as the RAF was
established. This dramatic and evocative account of the air battles
which changed the course of the Second World War and the people
involved is a powerful and epic telling of one of the greatest
triumphs in British military history. 'A remarkable exercise in
research at air-crew levels. He writes of air combat with verve and
at times almost with poetry' Sunday Times 'Lively and well written
... encompasses moments of exhilaration and terror' Kirkus Reviews
'A fine book' Len Deighton, New York Times
The Dark Side of Technology is intended as a powerful wake-up call
to the potential dangers that could, in the near future, destroy
our current advanced civilizations. The author examines how fragile
our dependence on electronic communications, information storage,
and satellites is, as vulnerability increases in an age of raising
security concerns. This weakness is evident from the exponential
rise in cyber-crime and terrorism. Satellites are crucial to
modern-day living, but they can be destroyed by energetic space
debris or damaged by solar emissions. Destruction of data,
communications, and electrical power grids would bring disaster to
advanced nations. Such events could dramatically change our social
and economic landscapes within the next 10-20 years. New technology
equally impacts employment, agriculture, biology, medicine,
transport, languages, and our social well-being. This book explores
both the good and the bad aspects of technological advances, in
order to raise awareness and promote caution. Technology may be
impressive, but we need to be mindful of potential negative future
effects. We ought to seriously consider the long term consequences
of an increasing failure to pursue healthy life styles, use of
ineffective antibiotics, genetic mutations, and the destruction of
food supplies and natural resources. The diverse topics covered
aims to show why we must act now to plan for both the predictable
downsides of technology, and also develop contingency plans for
potential major catastrophes, including natural events where we
cannot define accurate time scales.
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