... this book represents significant progress towards positioning the concept of social advantage and disadvantage as a core concern of social policy scholarship.
Peter Saunders, Journal of Social Policy
Social advantage and disadvantage are potent catch-all terms. They have no established definition but, considered in relation to one another, they can embrace a wide variety of more specific concepts that address the ways in which human society causes, exacerbates or fails to prevent social divisions or injustices. This book captures the sense in which any conceptualisation of disadvantage is concerned with the consequences of processes by which relative advantage has been selectively conferred or attained. It considers how inequalities and social divisions are created as much by the concentration of advantage among the best-off as by the systematic disadvantage of the worst-off.
The book critically discusses - from a global and a UK perspective - a spectrum of conceptual frameworks and ideas relating to poverty, social exclusion, capability deprivation, rights violations, social immobility, and human or social capital deficiency. It addresses advantage and disadvantage from a life course perspective through discussions of family and childhood, education, work, old age, and the dynamics of income and wealth. It considers cross-cutting divides that are implicated in the social construction and maintenance of advantage and disadvantage, including divisions premised on gender, 'race', ethnicity, migration and religion, neighbourhood and the experience of crime.
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This volume addresses the origin and effects of advantage and disadvantage from a global and UK perspective, and provides an overview of a variety of conceptual frameworks and a spectrum of social inequalities, processes, and divisions.
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PART ONE; PART TWO; PART THREE; PART 4
Features contributions from leading experts
Provides details and extensive coverage
Essential reading for scholars and students in the fields of Politics, Sociology, Social Policy, and Human Geography
Hartley Dean is Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics. Before his academic career he had been a welfare rights worker in one of London's most deprived multi-cultural neighbourhoods. His principal research interests stem from concerns with poverty and social justice. He is a past editor of the Journal of Social Policy and among his more recently published books are Social Policy (Polity, 2006 and 2012), Understanding
Human Need (The Policy Press, 2010) and Social Rights and Human Welfare (Routledge, 2015). Lucinda Platt is Professor of Social Policy and Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Before joining
the LSE she worked at Essex University and at UCL Institute of Education, where she was Director of the Millennium Cohort Study. A quantitative sociologist, Lucinda's main research interests are in inequalities and social stratification, in particular child poverty, ethnicity, immigration and disability, and in longitudinal approaches to analysis of these issues. Her most recent book was Understanding Inequalities: Stratification and Difference (Polity, 2011), and she is co-author of
Intergenerational Consequences of Migration (forthcoming Palgrave Macmillan).
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Features contributions from leading experts
Provides details and extensive coverage
Essential reading for scholars and students in the fields of Politics, Sociology, Social Policy, and Human Geography
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198737070
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
710 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
175 mm
Dybde
27 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
392