Informal Employment in the Advanced Economies: Implications for Work and Welfare
by MR Colin C Williams and Jan Windebank
Everybody Loves a Good Drought
Acclaimed across the world, prescribed in over 100 universities and colleges, and included in part in The Century's Greatest Reportage (Ordfront, 2000), alongside the works of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Studs Terkel and John Reed, Everybody Loves a Good Drought is the established classic on rural poverty in India. Twenty years after publication, it remains unsurpassed in the scope and depth of reportage, providing an intimate view of the daily struggles of the poor and the efforts, often ludicrous,...
Urban Poverty, Political Participation, and the State (Pitt Latin American)
by Henry Dietz
Urban Poverty, Political Participation, and the State offers an unparalleled longitudinal view of how the urban poor saw themselves and their neighborhoods and how they behaved and organized to provide their neighborhoods with basic goods and services. Grounding research on theoretical notions from Albert Hirschman and an analytical framework from Verba and Nie, Dietz produces findings that hold great interest for comparativists and students of political behavior in general.
Unemployment and the state in Britain offers an important and original contribution to understandings of the 1930s. Through a comparative case study of south Wales and the north-east of England, the book explores the impact of the highly controversial means test, the relationship between the unemployed and the government and the nature of some of the largest protests of the interwar period. This study will appeal to students and scholars of the depression, social movements, studies of the unempl...
Just beyond Las Vegas's neon and fantasy live thousands of homeless people, most of them men. To the millions of visitors who come to Las Vegas each year to enjoy its gambling and entertainment, the city's homeless people are largely invisible, segregated from tourist areas because it's ""good business."" Now, through candid discussions with homeless men, analysis of news reports, and years of fieldwork, Kurt Borchard reveals the lives and desperation of men without shelter in Las Vegas.Borchard...
Childhoods at the Intersection of the Local and the Global (Studies in Childhood and Youth)
Childhoods at the Intersection of the Local and the Global examines the imposition of the modern Western notion of childhood, which is now deemed as universal, on other cultures and explores how local communities react to these impositions in various ways such as manipulation, outright rejection and acceptance. The book discusses childhoods in different regions of the world and boasts a range of contributors from several academic disciplines such as Sociology, Social Work, Education, Anthropolog...
Post-Orientalism is a sustained record of Hamid Dabashi's reflections over many years on the question of authority and power. Who gets to represent whom and by what authority? Dabashi's work picks up where Edward Said's Orientalism left off. Said traced the origin of the power of representation and the normative agency that it entails to the colonial hubris that carried a militant band of mercenary merchants, military officers, Christian missionaries, and European Orientalists around the globe....
As an adult, I learned this: persist. Work hard. Face rejection, weather the setbacks, until you meet the gatekeeper who will open a door for you. Jesmyn Ward grew up in a poor, rural community in Mississippi. Today, as the first woman to win the National Book Award twice, she is celebrated as one of America's greatest living writers. Navigate Your Stars is a stirring reflection on the value of hard work and the importance of respect for oneself and others. First delivered as a 2018 commenc...
The debate over the size and scope of the federal government has raged from the New Deal right up through the 2016 presidential race. So why have opponents of big government so rarely made political headway? Because they fail to address the fundamental issue. Patrick M. Garry changes that in this short, powerful book. Garry, a law professor and political commentator, reveals six ways in which big government hurts the very people its purports to help: the poor, the working class, and the middle c...
Roma and the Transition in Central and Eastern Europe
by Dena Ringold
The situation of the Roma (or gypsies) in Central and Eastern Europe is one of the most challenging issues to emerge during the transition from socialism. As the socialist regimes collapsed and a free market economy was introduced, economic opportunities increased. However, job security and housing deteriorated. While political participation throughout the population surged, so did ethnic tension, which put the Roma, an already threatened minority, at even greater risk. Since they have always be...
Coming of Age in the Other America
by Stefanie DeLuca, Susan Clampet-Lundquist, and Professor of Sociology Kathryn Edin
Low-income Self-employment (Studies in Cash & Care)
by Tony Eardley and Anne Corden
Little is known about the realities of the low income self-employed and the relationship people have with the social security system. This work focuses on the lower income self-employed and moves against the commonly held view of the self-employed as affluent and self-sufficient. Although the sector is still largley male dominated there have been rises in the number of women in self-employment, as it seems to provide a way to combine work and their caring roles. The book concludes with a discuss...
The Money Problems of the Poor (Studies in Deprivation & Disadvantage)
by Pauline Ashley
Theory and Practice in Voluntary Social Action (Studies of Care in the Community)
by Chris L. Clark
This study asks how social and community workers use knowledge and theory in their practice. It is based on research on voluntary action on unemployment in Scotland. The author argues that the usual approaches to the problem of relating theory to practice are misconceived, and proposes an alternative. The research aims to show that practitioners cannot in any simple sense rely on theory to guide their practice, but employ a system of beliefs and dispositions which comprise both much less and muc...