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Invisible Men
Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress
BeCky PettIt
or African American men without a high school diploma, being in prison or jail is more common than being employeda sobering reality that calls into question postCivil Rights era social gains. Nearly 70 percent of young black men will be imprisoned at some point in their lives, and poor black men with low levels of education make up a disproportionate share of incarcerated Americans. In Invisible Men, sociologist Becky Pettit demonstrates another vexing fact of mass incarceration: most national surveys do not account for prison inmates, a fact that results in a misrepresentation of U.S. political, economic, and social conditions in general and black progress in particular. Invisible Men provides an eye-opening examination of how mass incarceration has concealed decades of racial inequality. Pettit marshals a wealth of evidence correlating the explosion in prison growth with the disappearance of millions of black men into the American penal system. She shows that, because prison inmates are not included in most survey data, statistics that seemed to indicate a narrowing black-white racial gapon educational attainment, work force participation, and earningsinstead fail to capture persistent racial, economic, and social disadvantage among African Americans. Federal statistical agencies, including the U.S. Census Bureau, collect surprisingly little information about the incarcerated, and inmates are not included in household samples in national surveys. As a result, these men are invisible to most mainstream social institutions, lawmakers, and nearly all social science research that isnt directly related to crime or criminal justice. Since merely being counted poses such a challenge, inmates livesincluding their family background, the communities they come from, or what happens to them after incarcerationare even more rarely examined. And since correctional budgets provide primarily for housing and monitoring inmates, with little left over for job training or rehabilitation, a large population of young men are not only invisible to society while in prison but also ill-equipped to participate upon release. Invisible Men provides a vital reality check for social researchers, lawmakers, and anyone who cares about racial equality. The book shows that more than a half century after the first civil rights legislation, the dismal fact of mass incarceration inflicts widespread and enduring damage by undermining the fair allocation of public resources and political representation, by depriving the children of inmates of their parents economic and emotional participation, and, ultimately, by concealing African American disadvantage from public view.
BeCky PettIt is professor of sociology at the University of Washington.
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tiny Publics
A theory of Group Action and Culture
GARy AlAn FIne
f all politics is local, then so is almost everything else, argues sociologist Gary Alan Fine. We organize our lives by relying on those closest to usfamily members, friends, work colleagues, team mates, and other intimatesto create meaning and order. In this thoughtful and wide-ranging new book, Fine argues that the basic building blocks of society itself are forged within the boundaries of such small groups, the tiny publics necessary for a robust, functioning social order at all levels. Action, meaning, authority, inequality, organization, and institutions all have their roots in small groups. Yet for the past twenty-five years social scientists have tended to ignore the power of groups in favor of an emphasis on organizations, societies, or individuals. Based on over thirty-five years of Fines own ethnographic research across an array of small groups, Tiny Publics presents a compelling new theory of the pivotal role of small groups in organizing social life. No social system can thrive without flourishing small groups. They provide havens in an impersonal world, where faceless organizations become humanized. Taking examples from such diverse worlds as Little League baseball teams, restaurant workers, high school debate teams, weather forecasters, and political volunteers, Fine demonstrates how each group has its own unique culture, or idioculturethe system of knowledge, beliefs, behavior, and customs that define and hold a group together. With their dense network of relationships, groups serve as important sources of social and cultural capital for their members. The apparently innocuous jokes, rituals, and nicknames prevalent within Little League baseball teams help establish how teams function internally and how they compete with other teams. Small groups also provide a platform for their members to engage in broader social discourse and a supportive environment to begin effecting change in larger institutions. In his studies of mushroom collectors and high school debate teams, Fine demonstrates the importance of stories that group members tell each other about their successes and frustrations in fostering a strong sense of social cohesion. And Fine shows how the personal commitment political volunteers bring to their efforts is reinforced by the close-knit nature of their work, which in turn has the power to change larger groups and institutions. In this way, the actions and debates begun in small groups can eventually radiate outward to affect every level of society. Fine convincingly demonstrates how small groups provide fertile ground for the seeds of civic engagement. Outcomes often attributed to large-scale social forces originate within such small-scale domains. Employing rich insights from both sociology and social psychology, as well as vivid examples from a revealing array of real-world groups, Tiny Publics provides a compelling examination of the importance of small groups and of the rich vitality they bring to social life.
GARy AlAn FIne is professor of sociology at Northwestern University.
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any Americans, holding fast to the American Dream and the promise of equal opportunity, claim that social class doesnt matter. Yet the ways we talk and dress, our interactions with authority figures, the degree of trust we place in strangers, our religious beliefs, our achievements, our senses of morality and of ourselvesall are marked by social class, a powerful factor affecting every domain of life. In Facing Social Class, social psychologists Susan Fiske and Hazel Rose Markus, and a team of sociologists, anthropologists, linguists, and legal scholars, examine the many ways we communicate our class position to others and how social class shapes our daily, face-to-face interactionsfrom casual exchanges to interactions at school, work, and home. Facing Social Class exposes the contradiction between the American ideal of equal opportunity and the harsh reality of growing inequality, and it shows how this tension is reflected in cultural ideas and values, institutional practices, everyday social interactions, and psychological tendencies. Contributor Joan Williams examines cultural differences between middle- and working-class people and shows how the cultural gap between social class groups can influence everything from voting practices and political beliefs to work habits, home life, and social behaviors. In a similar vein, Annette Lareau and Jessica McCrory Calarco analyze the cultural advantages or disadvantages exhibited by different classes in institutional settings, such as those between parents and teachers. They find that middle-class parents are better able to advocate effectively for their children in school than are working-class parents, who are less likely to challenge a teachers authority. Michael Kraus, Michelle Rheinschmidt, and Paul Piff explore the subtle ways we signal class status in social situations. Conversational style and how close one person stands to another, for example, can influence the balance of power in a business interaction. Diana Sanchez and Julie Garcia even demonstrate that markers of low socioeconomic status such as incarceration or unemployment can influence whether individuals are categorized as white or blacka finding that underscores how race and class may work in tandem to shape advantage or disadvantage in social interactions. The United States has one of the highest levels of income inequality and one of the lowest levels of social mobility among industrialized nations, yet many Americans continue to buy into the myth that theirs is a classless society. Facing Social Class faces the reality of how social class operates in our daily lives, why it is so pervasive, and what can be done to alleviate its effects.
susAn t. FIske is Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology at Princeton University. HAzel Rose MARkus is Davis-Brack Professor in the Behavioral Sciences in the Department of Psychology, director of
CoNTrIbuTors Courtney Bearns Paul DiMaggio susan R. Fisk susan t. Fiske stephanie A. Fryberg Julie A. Garcia Crystal C. Hall Michael W. kraus Adrie kusserow Annette lareau Hazel Rose Markus Jessica McCrory Calarco Peggy J. Miller Miguel Moya Paul k. Piff Michelle l. Rheinschmidt Cecilia l. Ridgeway Ann Marie Russell Diana t. sanchez Douglas e. sperry nicole M. stephens Joan C. Williams
the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity (CCSRE), and director of the Mind, Culture, and Society Lab at Stanford University.
978-0-87154-479-7 April 2012 paper 6 5/8 x 9 1/4 248 pp. $37.50 PHONE (800) 524-6401 FAX (800) 688-2877 WEB www.russellsage.org
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CoNTrIbuTors silke Anger lars Bergman erik Bihagen Paul Bingley Anders Bjrklund Jo Blanden Bruce Bradbury Massimiliano Bratti lorenzo Cappellari Miles Corak emilia Del Bono kathryn Duckworth Christelle Dumas Greg J. Duncan John ermisch olaf Groh-samberg Robert Haveman Markus Jntti John Jerrim Jan o. Jonsson Ilan katz katja kokko
JoHn eRMIsCH is professor of economics at the Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex. MARkus JnttI is professor of economics at the Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University. tIMotHy M. sMeeDInG is director of the Institute for Research on Poverty, University of WisconsinMadison.
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nurturing Dads
social Initiatives for Contemporary Fatherhood
WIllIAM MARsIGlIo and kevIn Roy
merican fathers are a highly diverse group, but the breadwinning, live-in, biological dad prevails as the fatherhood ideal. Consequently, policymakers continue to emphasize marriage and residency over initiatives that might help foster healthy father-child relationships and creative co-parenting regardless of marital or residential status. In Nurturing Dads, William Marsiglio and Kevin Roy explore the ways new initiatives can address the social, cultural, and economic challenges men face in contemporary families and foster more meaningful engagement between many different kinds of fathers and their children. What makes a good father? The firsthand accounts in Nurturing Dads show that the answer to this question varies widely and in ways that counter the mainstream provide and reside model of fatherhood. Marsiglio and Roy document the personal experiences of more than 300 men from a wide range of socioeconomic backgrounds and diverse settings, including fathers-to-be, young adult fathers, middleclass dads, stepfathers, men with multiple children in separate families, and fathers in correctional facilities. They find that most dads express the desire to have strong, close relationships with their children and to develop the nurturing skills to maintain these bonds. But they also find that disadvantaged fathers, including young dads and those in constrained financial and personal circumstances, confront myriad structural obstacles, such as poverty, inadequate education, and poor job opportunities. Nurturing Dads asserts that society should help fathers become more committed and attentive caregivers and that federal and state agencies, work sites, grassroots advocacy groups, and the media all have roles to play. Recent efforts to introduce state-initiated paternity leave should be coupled with social programs that encourage fathers to develop unconditional commitments to children, to co-parent with mothers, to establish partnerships with their childrens other caregivers, and to develop parenting skills and resources before becoming fathers via activities like volunteering and mentoring kids. Ultimately, Marsiglio and Roy argue, such combined strategies would not only change the policy landscape to promote engaged fathering but also change the cultural landscape to view nurturance as a fundamental aspect of good fathering. Care is a human experiencenot just a womans responsibilityand this core idea behind Nurturing Dads holds important implications for how society supports its families and defines manhood. The book promotes the progressive notion that fathers should provide more than financial support and, in the process, bring about a better start in life for their children.
WIllIAM MARsIGlIo is professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology & Law at the University of Florida. kevIn Roy is associate professor of family science at the University of Maryland.
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978-0-87154-564-0 June 2012 paper 6 x 9 240 pp. $39.95 PHONE (800) 524-6401 FAX (800) 688-2877 WEB www.russellsage.org
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978-0-87154-717-0 April 2012 paper 6 x 9 320 pp. $47.50 PHONE (800) 524-6401 FAX (800) 688-2877 WEB www.russellsage.org
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lobal crises such as rising economic inequality, volatile financial markets, and devastating climate change illustrate the defects of a global economic order controlled largely by transnational corporations, wealthy states, and other elites. As the impacts of such crises have intensified, they have generated a new wave of protests extending from the countries of the Middle East and North Africa throughout Europe, North America, and elsewhere. This new surge of resistance builds upon a long history of transnational activism as it extends and develops new tactics for pro-democracy movements acting simultaneously around the world. In Social Movements in the World-System, Jackie Smith and Dawn Wiest build upon theories of social movements, global institutions, and the political economy of the world-system to uncover how institutions define the opportunities and constraints on social movements, which in turn introduce ideas and models of action that help transform social activism as well as the system itself. Smith and Wiest trace modern social movements to the founding of the United Nations, as well as struggles for decolonization and the rise of national independence movements, showing how these movements have shifted the context in which states and other global actors compete and interact. The book shows how transnational activism since the end of the Cold War, including United Nations global conferences and more recently at World Trade Organization meetings, has shaped the ways groups organize. Global summits and UN conferences have traditionally provided focal points for activists working across borders on a diverse array of issues. By engaging in these international arenas, movements have altered discourses to emphasize norms of human rights and ecological sustainability over territorial sovereignty. Over time, however, activists have developed deeper and more expansive networks and new spaces for activism. This growing pool of transnational activists and organizations democratizes the process of organizing, enables activists to build on previous experiences and share knowledge, and facilitates local actions in support of global change agendas. As the world faces profound financial and ecological crises, and as the United States dominance in the world political economy is increasingly challenged, it is especially urgent that scholars, policy analysts, and citizens understand how institutions shape social behavior and the distribution of power. Social Movements in the World-System helps illuminate the contentious and complex interactions between social movements and global institutions and contributes to the search for paths towards a more equitable, sustainable, and democratic world. American College of Physicians.
JACkIe sMItH is professor of sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. DAWn WIest is senior research analyst at the
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New in Paperback
Brokered Boundaries
Creating Immigrant Identity in Anti-Immigrant times
DouGlAs s. MAssey and MAGAly snCHez R.
A compelling and sobering account of the lives of immigrants in a time of economic downturn and harsh anti-immigrant policies. Based on interviews with first- and second-generation, mostly undocumented, Latinos in the urban northeast, Brokered Boundaries shows how they develop a new sense of themselves and American society in the face of exclusionary barriers. Anyone wanting to understand how immigrants are navigating life in the United States today should read this important, well-written, and thought-provoking book.Nancy Foner, City University of New York Based on statistical and ethnographic accounts, Douglas Massey and Magaly Snchez have written a book that offers an insightful portrait of new Latin American immigrants and also challenges the prevailing anti-immigrant hysteria. The overwhelming evidence shows that almost all new immigrants are hopeful, law abiding, family and community orientated, and working hard to secure a better life for themselves and their children. The harshness of American policies has not reduced immigration, but has legitimized discrimination that has marginalized immigrants and weakened the fabric of American society.Charles Hirschman, University of Washington
DouGlAs s. MAssey is Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School. MAGAly snCHez R. is senior researcher at the Office of Population Research at Princeton University.
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of Sociology and Economics and director of the Center for Research on Immigration, Population, and Public Policy at the University of California, Irvine.
Counted out
same-sex Relations and Americans Definitions of Family
BRIAn PoWell, CAtHeRIne BolzenDAHl, ClAuDIA GeIst, and lAlA CARR steelMAn
Winner of the 2011 William J. Goode Award from the ASAs Section on Family Counted Out makes clear why family values has been such a hotly debated political issue in the United States. It shows the ambivalence Americans have about including as family those arrangements that are not based on marriageheterosexual cohabitation and same-sex parenting and partnering. Using rich and unique data, Counted Out also illuminates the limits of the gender revolution. Strong gender biases continue to influence who Americans think should have custody of children following divorce. Americans also continue to overwhelmingly endorse the practice of women taking their husbands name at marriage. Anyone interested in family change or change in gender norms will find much food for thought in this exceptionally wellargued and insightful volume.Suzanne Bianchi, University of California, Los Angeles
BRIAn PoWell is James H. Rudy Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. CAtHeRIne BolzenDAHl is assistant professor of sociology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of California, Irvine. ClAuDIA GeIst is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Utah. lAlA CARR steelMAn is professor in the Depart-
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New in Paperback
Gendered tradeoffs
Family, social Policy, and economic Inequality in twenty-one Countries
BeCky PettIt and JennIFeR l. Hook
Becky Pettit and Jennifer L. Hook have asked exactly the right questions, placing this book on the frontier of comparative research on women, work, and social policy. After a generation of researchers assessed the advantageous effects of work-family policies, comparative scholars are now focused on understanding and untangling the possibility of unintended consequencesespecially those that might worsen aspects of gender inequality in the labor market. Pettit and Hook conclude that some institutions that enable high levels of womens employment may, at the same time, reduce the relative quality of that employment. While some of the volumes conclusions are open to debate, Gendered Tradeoffs propels this crucial line of scholarship forward in leaps and bounds.Janet Gornick, director, Luxembourg Income Study, and professor of political science and sociology, Graduate Center, CUNY
BeCky PettIt is associate professor of sociology at the University of Washington. JennIFeR l. Hook is research scientist in the School of Social Work at the University of Washington, Seattle.
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ment Law Project, and co-chair of the Fairness Initiative on Low-Wage Work.
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recently Published
Whither opportunity?
Rising Inequality, schools, and Childrens life Chances
GReG J. DunCAn and RICHARD J. MuRnAne, editors
Whither Opportunity? examines in detail and from all conceivable angles the power of class to determine the developmental fate of Americas children. From this volume, we learn that children in communities experiencing unemployment do worse in school even if their own families are safe from its reach; that test score gaps by income are larger and growing faster than the gaps between black and white; that expenditures by high-income families on enrichment of all kinds is vastly larger than what low-income families can afford. All of this adds up to a new and troubling examination of the ways in which income inequality is pressing the nations children, youth, neighborhoods, schools, and families. I dont often use the overworked phrase, must read, but it most definitely applies to this book.Katherine S. Newman, Johns Hopkins University
GReG J. DunCAn is Distinguished Professor in the Department of Education at the University of California, Irvine. RICHARD J. MuRnAne is Thompson Professor of Education and Society at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
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Stockholm University.
shattering Culture
American Medicine Responds to Cultural Diversity
MARy-Jo DelveCCHIo GooD, sARAH s. WIllen, setH DonAl HAnnAH, ken vICkeRy, and lAWRenCe tAesenG PARk, editors
Shattering Culture . . . carefully examines the mantra of cultural competence. While valuing different cultural frameworks and emphasizing the need to understand patients from their own perspectives, the authors show how some elements of respect for diversity must be rethought in the face of hard realities of running a health care system. The message is sensitive, sensible, and energizingly bold. Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Shattering Culture humanizes the struggle to provide culturally grounded health care to a patient population that refuses to fit neatly into our tidy conceptual boxes. Drawing from their own insider and outsider perspectives, the editors and authors deliver an unusually empathic yet critical analysis of the various players and practices that interact to shape patient carefor better and for worse.Doris F. Chang, New School for Social Research
MARy-Jo DelveCCHIo GooD is professor of social medicine at Harvard Medical School. sARAH s. WIllen is assistant professor of anthropology at Southern Methodist University. setH DonAl HAnnAH is a graduate student at Harvard University. ken vICkeRy is director of external fellowships at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. lAWRenCe tAesenG PARk is assistant professor of psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital.
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recently Published
Just neighbors?
Research on African American and latino Relations in the united states
eDWARD telles, MARk Q. sAWyeR, and GAsPAR RIveRA-sAlGADo, editors
Just Neighbors? is a needed and welcome assessment of African American and Latino relations. As more of the nations major cities become majority minority a key question becomes how people and communities of color interact with, understand, and affect one another. Edward Telles and colleagues have pulled together an excellent set of articles that in a rich and mutually informing manner span the fields of anthropology, political science, and sociology. The work highlights the dynamics of group identity and stereotyping processes, of local context and characteristics particularly within the labor market, and especially of community leadership in molding the tenor of group relations. Just Neighbors? provides an important and broad-gauge baseline for serious scholarship on black-Latino relations. Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University
eDWARD telles is professor of sociology at Princeton University and vice president of the American Sociological Association. MARk Q. sAWyeR is associate professor of African American studies and political science at the University of California, Los Angeles. GAsPAR RIveRA-sAlGADo is project director at the UCLA Center for Labor Research and Education.
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American Memories
Atrocities and the law
JoACHIM J. sAvelsBeRG and RyAn D. kInG
Through close case study analysis Joachim Savelsberg and Ryan King provide the most insightful account to date of the relationships between collective memory and law, atrocity and institutional response. Situated at the intersection of comparative, cultural, and socio-legal scholarship, the book will be influential in each of these. American Memories breaks new ground in thinking through how society thinks about the unthinkable.Philip Smith, Yale University What is the role of law in shaping collective memory, and what is the role of collective memory in shaping law? Can, how, and does law work through collective memory to help us prevent or avoid future atrocities? By empirically testing hypotheses about the connections between law and memory, by specifying the mechanisms of these connections, and by illustrating complex and interesting cases, American Memories makes an invaluable contribution to the discourse and will be an enduring resource for students and scholars alike.Jeffrey Olick, University of Virginia
JoACHIM J. sAvelsBeRG is professor of sociology at the Unviersity of Minnesota, Minneapolis. RyAn D. kInG is associ-
ate professor of sociology at the University at Albany, State University of New York. A Volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology
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recently Published
Coethnicity
Diversity and the Dilemmas of Collective Action
JAMes HAByARIMAnA, MACARtAn HuMPHReys, DAnIel n. PosneR, and JeReMy M. WeInsteIn
Winner of the Gregory Luebbert Book Award from the APSA Good public policy demands that social scientists go beyond statistical correlations in order to understand the mechanisms that lead to market and government failure. James Habyarimana, Macartan Humphreys, Daniel Posner, and Jeremy Weinstein in Coethnicity have brilliantly, persistently, and innovatively sorted out and identified the mechanisms that undermine the potential of ethnic diversity to enrich society through the gains from trade that ethnic complementarities should provide.David D. Laitin, Stanford University
JAMes HAByARIMAnA is assistant professor of public policy at the Georgetown Public Policy Institute. MACARtAn HuMPHReys is associate professor of political science at Columbia University. DAnIel n. PosneR is associate professor of political science at the University of California, Los Angeles. JeReMy M. WeInsteIn is assistant professor of political
Columbia University.
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Achieving Anew
How new Immigrants Do in American schools, Jobs, and neighborhoods
MICHAel J. WHIte and JennIFeR e. GlICk
Winner of the 2010 Otis Dudley Duncan Award Achieving Anew offers a longitudinal perspective on examining how well immigrants adapt to schools, labor markets, and residential communities in multiethnic urban America. Michael White and Jennifer Glick challenge the time-honored wisdom of assimilation and meticulously attend to the intersection of race, class, time, and space in determining upward socioeconomic mobility of contemporary immigrants.Min Zhou, UCLA Timely, innovative, and policy-relevant, [Achieving Anew] brings a much needed examination of national longitudinal data sets to the study of educational and residential incorporation across generations. Michael White and Jennifer Glick demonstrate through nuanced and careful analyses that the members of these groups, while substantially improving their situations over time, nonetheless often remain disadvantaged because they start from lower positions.Frank D. Bean, University of California, Irvine
MICHAel J. WHIte is professor of sociology and director of the Population Studies and Training Center at Brown University. JennIFeR e. GlICk is associate professor of sociology at Arizona State University.
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recently Published
MPIs National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy. Copublished with the Migration Policy Institute
University of WisconsinMadison.
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still Connected
Family and Friends in America since 1970
ClAuDe s. FIsCHeR
No one knows more about Americans social networks than Claude Fischer. His spare and elegant prose cuts through hype about the decline of social ties and presents a definitive and brilliantly nuanced account of our persisting yet subtly changing connections to others.Mark Granovetter, Stanford University Claude Fischer has done us all a valuable service in providing this careful and judicious examination of the data on friendship patterns and social contacts since the 1970s. Once again, it seems, journalists have mostly gotten it wrong in being too eager to identify dramatic trends and relying too readily on shoddy polls. Sometimes the news is that things have actually stayed pretty much the same, even when greater change might have been expected. Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University
ClAuDe s. FIsCHeR is professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley.
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recently Published
epidemic City
the Politics of Public Health in new york City
JAMes ColGRove
Public health done right saves many more lives than medical care, and New York Citys health department has long been recognized as a leader in protecting and promoting the health of its citizens. Epidemic City shows with great insight how the agency succeedsor notto the extent that it successfully navigates the rough political seas of each era.Thomas Farley, New York City Commissioner of Health James Colgrove makes a singular contribution to our understanding of the role of the public in public health practice. It is an uproarious story of larger than life personalities and even bigger public arguments that remind us continually of the crucial role of health politics in our democracy, and the tensions between cautious science and public fear. Marshaling vast amounts of information into a compelling and tell-able tale, Colgrove has written the definitive history of what has been possible, and not, in public health in the last fifty years.Susan M. Reverby, Wellesley College
JAMes ColGRove is associate professor in the Center for the History and Ethnics of Public Health at Columbia Univer-
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and Governance in the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute and Deparment of Political Science at the University of Minnesota.
978-0-87154-855-9 August 2011 paper 6 x 9 456 pp. $27.50
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selected backlist
Barriers to Reentry? the labor Market for Released Prisoners in Post-Industrial America
shawn Bushway, Michael A. stoll, and David F. Weiman, editors
978-0-87154-087-4 2007 cloth 386 pp. $37.50
Beyond the Boycott: labor Rights, Human Rights, and transnational Activism
Gay W. seidman
Beyond College for All: Career Paths for the Forgotten Half
James e. Rosenbaum
High rates of poverty were the shame of American capitalism even before the great recession of the late 2000s. The recession will raise poverty to levels not seen since the early 1960s. What can we do? Changing Poverty, Changing Policies documents the factors and decisions that have kept poverty rates high even in good times and then considers evidence-based policies that could help turn the tide in the war on povertyat least when the recovery comes. Whether you regard the policies as too modest or too far-reaching, the book is invaluable to understanding past failures to reduce poverty and in devising ways to improve on our abysmal record.Richard B. Freeman, National Bureau of Economic Research
978-0-87154-310-3 2009 paper 440 pp. $42.50
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Do Prisons Make us safer? the Benefits and Costs of the Prison Boom
steven Raphael and Michael A. stoll, editors
978-0-87154-860-3 2009 cloth 304 pp. $39.95
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Insufficient Funds: savings, Assets, Credit, and Banking Among low-Income Households
Rebecca M. Blank and Michael s. Barr, editors
A Volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-470-4 2011 paper 336 pp. $24.95
laboring Below the line: the new ethnography of Poverty, low-Wage Work, and survival in the Global economy
Frank Munger, editor
978-0-87154-619-7 2007 paper 336 pp. $22.50
latinas and African-American Women at Work: Race, Gender, and economic Inequality
Irene Browne, editor
978-0-87154-142-0 2000 paper 454 pp. $16.95
A Volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-748-4 2010 paper 446 pp. $27.50
Making ends Meet: How single Mothers survive Welfare and low-Wage Work
kathryn edin and laura lein
978-0-87154-142-0 2000 paper 454 pp. $22.00
Making Work Pay: the earned Income tax Credit and Its Impact on Americas Families
Bruce D. Meyer and Douglas Holtz-eakin, editors
978-0-87154-599-2 2002 cloth 400 pp. $49.95
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selected backlist
the new Dollars and Dreams: American Incomes and economic Change
Frank levy
978-0-87154-515-2 1999 paper 250 pp. $16.95
Old Assumptions, New Realities brings together an impressive set of scholars offering new perspectives drawn from a rich diversity of disciplines and methods. By highlighting the key assumptions that underlie the U.S. social welfare system and whether these assumptions are appropriate, this book offers important insights on fundamental questions for social policy and research.Maria Cancian, University of WisconsinMadison
Passing the torch: Does Higher education for the Disadvantaged Pay off Across Generations?
Paul Attewell and David e. lavin with Thurston Domina and Tania Levey
A Volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-507-7 2010 paper 400 pp. $24.95
Putting Poor People to Work: How the Work-First Idea eroded College Access for the Poor
kathleen M. shaw, sara Goldrick-Rab, Christopher Mazzeo, and Jerry A. Jacobs
978-0-87154-776-7 2009 paper 216 pp. $21.50
social Inequality
kathryn M. neckerman, editor
978-0-87154-621-0 2004 paper 1,024 pp. $49.95
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social Programs that Work
Jonathan Crane, editor
978-0-87154-174-1 2000 paper 336 pp. $14.95
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spin Cycle: How Research Is used in Policy Debates: the Case of Charter schools
Jeffrey R. Henig
staircases or treadmills? labor Market Intermediaries and economic opportunity in a Changing economy
Chris Benner, laura leete, and Manuel Pastor
978-0-87154-169-7 2007 cloth 312 pp. $32.50
Worker Participation: lessons from the Worker Co-ops in the Pacific northwest
John Pencavel
978-0-87154-656-2 2002 paper 128 pp. $12.95
Working and Poor provides a comprehensive scholarly analysis of low-wage workers. This book takes as its key question: looking at the long-term economic changes and economic cycles, how have changes in demographics, work patterns, and policy and program rules affected the well-being of less-skilled workers and low-income families? This theme is brilliantly addressed in each chapter, creating a strong unity within the book and a very clear organization of the issues.Labor Studies Journal
A Volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-064-5 2008 paper 448 pp. $24.95
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30
selected backlist
Fighting for time: shifting Boundaries of Work and social life
Cynthia Fuchs epstein and Arne l. kalleberg, editors
978-0-87154-287-8 2006 paper 384 pp. $22.50
For Better and For Worse: Welfare Reform and the Well-Being of Children and Families
Greg J. Duncan and P. lindsay Chase-lansdale, editors
978-0-87154-263-2 2004 paper 344 pp. $19.95
FAMIly WelFAre
Black Fathers in Contemporary American society: strengths, Weaknesses, and strategies for Change
obie Clayton, Ronald B. Mincy, and David Blankenhorn, editors
978-0-87154-158-1 2006 paper 200 pp. $15.95
Higher Ground: new Hope for the Working Poor and their Children
Greg J. Duncan, Aletha C. Huston, and thomas s. Weisner
Winner of the Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics
978-0-87154-167-3 2008 paper 184 pp. $24.95
Winner of the SRA Social Policy Award for Best Authored Book 20062008
978-0-87154-329-5 2010 paper 216 pp. $18.95
Winner of the ASAs 2007 Otis Dudley Duncan Award and the ASAs 2008 William J. Goode Award
Clearly, [Changing Rhythms of American Family Life] is a provocative and important book that contains a wealth of new information regarding the changing time use patterns in American families. In addition to being a new resource for family scholars, sociologists, demographers, and policy-makers, among many others, the data and arguments presented in this book . . . are sure to inspire additional research into American time use.Industrial and Labor Relations Review
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selected backlist
Indicators of Childrens Well-Being
Robert M. Hauser, Brett v. Brown, and William Prosser, editors
978-0-87154-386-8 1997 cloth 640 pp. $75.00
31
Making It Work
low-Wage employment, Family life, and Child Development
Hirokazu yoshikawa, thomas s. Weisner, and edward D. lowe, editors
Market Friendly or Family Friendly? the state and Gender Inequality in old Age
Madonna Harrington Meyer and Pamela Herd
neighborhood Poverty
vol. I: Context and Consequences for Children vol. II: Policy Implications in studying neighborhoods Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Greg J. Duncan, and J. lawrence Aber, editors
Vol. I: 978-0-87154-188-8 2000 paper 356 pp. $16.95 Vol. II: 978-0-87154-189-5 2000 paper 264 pp. $13.95
A valuable contribution to a growing body of social science and policy literature concerned with the challenges facing low-income working families and with the government responses to their plight. Through vivid description and cogent analysis of the everyday experiences of low-income working families, [Making It Work] effectively communicates what it means for families to survive at the economic margin. It extends understanding of the low-wage labor market, the work-family challenges that low-level jobs present, and the strengths as well as the limitations of a support-based employment model for ameliorating the socioeconomic standing of low-income parents and the well-being of their children.Social Service Review
978-0-87154-973-0 2009 paper 448 pp. $19.95
Putting Children First: How low-Wage Working Mothers Manage Child Care
Ajay Chaudry
978-0-87154-172-7 2006 paper 368 pp. $19.95
Reinsuring Health: Why More Middle-Class People Are uninsured and What Government Can Do
katherine swartz
978-0-87154-788-0 2007 paper 224 pp. $15.95
saving our Children from Poverty: What the united states Can learn from France
Barbara R. Bergmann
978-0-87154-115-4 1999 paper 184 pp. $14.95
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selected backlist
Crossing the Border: Research from the Mexican Migration Project
Jorge Durand and Douglas s. Massey, editors
978-0-87154-289-2 2006 paper 356 pp. $22.50
the Changing Face of Home: the transnational lives of the second Generation
Peggy levitt and Mary C. Waters, editors
978-0-87154-516-9 2006 paper 424 pp. $24.95
Color lines, Country lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth stratification in America
lingxin Hao
978-0-87154-319-6 2010 paper 328 pp. $24.95
A superb addition to the rapidly growing scholarly literature on immigrant political incorporation! By commissioning an excellent set of case studies on immigrant civic engagement, and by tying them together in a well-done and innovative conceptual and theoretical introduction, Karthick Ramakrishnan and Irene Bloemraad importantly document the often unconventional and invisible ways through which immigrants organize themselves and generate participation in civic activities.Frank D. Bean, University of California, Irvine
978-0-87154-778-1 2011 paper 408 pp. $27.50
A Volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-540-4 2010 paper 344 pp. $24.95
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selected backlist
the Handbook of International Migration: the American experience
Charles Hirschman, Josh DeWind, and Philip kasinitz, editors
978-0-87154-244-1 1999 cloth 508 pp. $65.00
33
Homeland Insecurity
the Arab American and Muslim American experience After 9/11
louise A. Cainkar
Intimate ethnography, based on years of acquaintance with Chicagos Arab communities, and savvy political commentary, backed up by painstaking research, come together in this forceful study, which will double as a guidebook to those who want to understand, and undermine, the mechanics of antiArab and anti-Muslim politics in the U.S. today.Andrew Shryock, University of Michigan
978-0-87154-053-9 2011 paper 338 pp. $23.95
Winner of the 2010 Distinguished Book Award from the American Sociological Association
978-0-87154-478-0 2009 paper 432 pp. $19.95
Immigrants and Boomers: Forging a new social Contract for the Future of America
Dowell Myers
978-0-87154-624-1 2008 paper 384 pp. $17.95
Immigration and opportunity: Race, ethnicity, and employment in the united states ethnic origins: the Adaptation of Cambodian and Hmong Refugees in Four American Cities
Jeremy Hein Frank D. Bean and stephanie Bell-Rose, editors
978-0-87154-151-2 2003 paper 412 pp. $24.95
ethnic solidarity for economic survival: korean Greengrocers in new york City
Pyong Gap Min
978-0-87154-641-8 2011 paper 216 pp. $24.95
Italians then, Mexicans now: Immigrant origins and second-Generation Progress, 1890 to 2000
Joel Perlmann
l.A. story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the u.s. labor Movement
Ruth Milkman
978-0-87154-635-7 2006 paper 264 pp. $24.95
lone Pursuit: Distrust and Defensive Individualism Among the Black Poor
sandra susan smith
978-0-87154-774-3 2010 paper 264 pp. $24.95
Growing up American: How vietnamese Children Adapt to life in the united states
Min zhou and Carl l. Bankston III
978-0-87154-995-2 1999 paper 288 pp. $16.95
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34
selected backlist
social science for What? Philanthropy and the social Question in a World turned Rightside up
Alice oConnor
978-0-87154-649-4 2007 cloth 192 pp. $22.50
not Just Black and White: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Immigration, Race, and ethnicity in the united states
nancy Foner and George M. Fredrickson, editors
978-0-87154-270-0 2005 paper 408 pp. $24.95
behAvIorAl eCoNoMICs
Advances in Behavioral Finance
Richard H. thaler, editor
978-0-87154-844-3 1993 paper 598 pp. $21.95
to Be an Immigrant
kay Deaux
978-0-87154-085-0 2009 paper 272 pp. $21.95
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selected backlist
Culture and Resource Conflict: Why Meanings Matter
35
the Diversity Challenge: social Identity and Intergroup Relations on the College Campus
Jim sidanius, shana levin, Colette van laar, and David o. sears
978-0-87154-794-1 2010 paper 460 pp. $24.95
This insightful volume asks how new behavioral insights affect time-honored principles of neoclassical public finance. . . . Every serious student of public finance will want to read this book, to master its findings, and to take up the editors invitation to help re-evaluate some of the foundations of our field.James Poterba, Massachusetts Institute of Technology An excellent collection. Some of the essays offer important discussions of foundational questions about human behavior; others make real progress on concrete issues, such as tax compliance and savings for retirement. Behavioral Public Finance is an extremely valuable addition to the burgeoning literature in behavioral economics. Cass R. Sunstein, University of Chicago
978-0-87154-597-8 2006 cloth 416 pp. $45.00
navigating the Future: social Identity, Coping, and life tasks the sociology of the economy
Frank Dobbin, editor
978-0-87154-284-7 2004 cloth 360 pp. $49.95
the Promotion of social Awareness: Powerful lessons from the Partnership of Developmental theory and Classroom Practice
Robert l. selman
978-0-87154-756-9 2007 paper 344 pp. $24.95
soCIAl PsyCholoGy
Contesting stereotypes and Creating Identities: social Categories, social Identities, and educational Participation
Andrew J. Fuligni, editor
978-0-87154-298-4 2007 cloth 288 pp. $42.50
social norms
Michael Hechter and karl-Dieter opp, editors
978-0-87154-355-4 2005 paper 456 pp. $24.95
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selected backlist
Democracy and the Culture of skepticism: Political trust in Argentina and Mexico
Matthew R. Cleary and susan C. stokes
978-0-87154-065-2 2009 paper 344 pp $24.95
Distrust
Russell Hardin, editor
978-0-87154-364-6 2009 paper 344 pp. $22.50
This collection of essays from diverse scholars will become a standard reference book for those interested in the conditions generating trust and the effects of trust in interpersonal relations, groups, networks, organizations, and institutional systems. Taken together, the essays provide new explanatory insights on the properties and dynamics of trust at the micro, meso, and macro levels of social reality. Theoretical insights are illustrated with data collected by a range of methodologies and a wide range of settings. A book that will appeal to researchers and theorists within academia, but equally significant, a book that will prove useful to policy makers and applies social scientists. Jonathan H. Turner, University of California, Riverside
street-level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public services: 30th Anniversary edition
Michael lipsky
978-0-87154-544-2 2010 paper 300 pp. $18.95
TrusT serIes
Cooperation Without trust?
karen s. Cook, Russell Hardin, and Margaret levi
978-0-87154-165-9 2007 paper 272 pp. $21.95
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selected backlist
trust in society
karen s. Cook, editor
978-0-87154-181-9 2003 paper 432 pp. $24.95
37
Good Jobs, Bad Jobs: the Rise of Polarized and Precarious employment systems in the united states, 1970s to 2000s
Arne l. kalleberg See page 13.
trust in the law: encouraging Public Cooperation with the Police and Courts
tom R. tyler and yuen J. Huo
978-0-87154-889-4 2002 cloth 264 pp. $32.95
rose serIes
American Memories: Atrocities and the law
Joachim J. savelsberg and Ryan D. king See page 17.
Market Friendly or Family Friendly? the state and Gender Inequality in old Age
Madonna Harrington Meyer and Pamela Herd See page 31.
Passing the torch: Does Higher education for the Disadvantaged Pay off Across the Generations?
Paul Attewell and David lavin with Thurston Domina and Tania Levey See page 28.
Beyond the Boycott: labor Rights, Human Rights, and transnational Activism
Gay W. seidman See page 26.
Beyond College for All: Career Paths for the Forgotten Half
James e. Rosenbaum See page 26.
they say Cut Back, We say Fight Back! Welfare Activism in an era of Retrenchment
ellen Reese See page 17.
trust in schools: A Core Resource for Improvement Changing Rhythms of American Family life
suzanne M. Bianchi, John P. Robinson, and Melissa A Milkie See page 30. Anthony s. Bryk and Barbara schneider See page 36.
INsTITuTIoNAl ANAlysIs
the Company Doctor: Risk, Responsibility, and Corporate Professionalism
elaine Draper
978-0-87154-290-8 2005 paper 416 pp. $29.95
Disease Prevention as social Change: the state, society, and Public Health in the united states, France, Great Britain, and Canada
Constance nathanson
978-0-87154-645-6 2009 paper 344 pp. $19.95
ethnic origins: the Adaptation of Cambodian and Hmong Refugees in Four American Cities
Jeremy Hein See page 33.
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38
selected backlist
legitimacy and Criminal Justice: International Perspectives
security v. liberty
Conflicts Between Civil liberties and national security in American History
Daniel Farber, editor
Anthony Braga, Jeffrey Fagan, tracey Meares, Robert sampson, tom R. tyler, and Chris Winship, editors
978-0-87154-876-4 2007 cloth 408 pp. $49.95
This outstanding collection of essays, by an accomplished group of historians and legal academics, describes how civil liberties have been limited in the name of real or imagined threats to the nations security in the pastand then shows how we might apply the lessons of earlier eras to our current situation. It is hard to think of a more important subject, or of a group of authors who are better qualified to teach us about it. David A. Strauss, University of Chicago Law School Since 9/11 the tension between national security and civil liberties has again become a pressing issue of public concern. The concise, thoughtful, and well-written essays in this volume provide valuable perspectives on current debates by analyzing this tension during key episodes throughout American history.David M. Rabban, University of Texas School of Law
978-0-87154-327-1 2008 cloth 256 pp. $32.50
local Justice
Jon elster
978-0-87154-232-8 1993 paper 288 pp. $16.95
the Market Comes to education in sweden: An evaluation of swedens surprising school Reforms
Anders Bjrklund, Melissa A. Clark, Per-Anders edin, Peter Fredriksson, and Alan B. krueger
978-0-87154-140-6 2005 cloth 280 pp. $27.50
Inequality and American Democracy: What We know and What We need to learn
lawrence R. Jacobs and theda skocpol, editors
978-0-87154-414-8 2007 paper 256 pp. $19.95
Preferences and situations: Points of Intersection Between Historical and Rational Choice Institutionalism
Ira katznelson and Barry R. Weingast, editors
978-0-87154-442-1 2007 paper 352 pp. $24.95
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selected backlist
social Contracts under stress: the Middle Classes of America, europe, and Japan at the turn of the Century
olivier zunz, leonard schoppa, and nobuhiro Hiwatari, editors
978-0-87154-998-3 2004 paper 448 pp. $27.50
39
Winner of the 2010 Best Book Award from the ASAs Rationality and Society Section
978-0-87154-508-4 2011 paper 264 pp. $23.95
Using survey statistics, social theory, and informed and thoughtful explanations of Americans response to the 2000 census, this book provides new insights on those who respond to surveys and those who do not. All who are interested in the quality of census data on which government policy is built should read The Hard Count. Janet L. Norwood, former U.S. Commissioner of Labor Statistics
978-0-87154-335-6 2009 paper 168 pp. $17.95
Century of Difference: How America Changed in the last one Hundred years
Claude s. Fischer and Michael Hout
9/11 ProJeCT
Citizenship and Crisis: Arab Detroit After 9/11
Detroit Arab American study team
978-0-87154-052-2 2009 cloth 312 pp. $42.50
the new American Reality: Who We Are, How We Got Here, Where We Are Going
Reynolds Farley
978-0-87154-239-7 1998 paper 385 pp. $18.50
the new Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals
Joel Perlmann and Mary C. Waters, editors
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orDer ForM
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Achieving Anew (pb), White/Glick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . American Memories (hb), Saveslberg/King . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Asian American Political Participation (pb), Wong et al. . . . . . . . The Broken Table (pb), Rhomberg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brokered Boundaries (pb), Massey/Snchez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Choosing Ethnicity, Negotiating Race (hb), Tuan/Shiao . . . . . . . . Coethnicity (pb), Habyarimana et al.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Counted Out (pb), Powell et al. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Designing Democratic Government (pb), Levi et al. . . . . . . . . . . . Democracy, Inequality, & Represent. (pb), Beramendi/Anderson . . The Diversity Paradox (pb), Lee/Bean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Encountering American Faultlines (pb), Itzigsohn . . . . . . . . . . . . Envy Up, Scorn Down (hb), Fiske . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Epidemic City (hb), Colgrove . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Epidemic City (pb), Colgrove . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Evangelicals & Democracy in America, V.1 (pb), Brint/Schroedel . Evangelicals & Democracy in America, V.2 (pb), Brint/Schroedel . Facing Social Class (pb), Fiske/Markus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Family Consequences of Childrens Disabilities (pb), Hogan . . . . . From Parents to Children (pb), Ermisch/Jntti/Smeeding. . . . . . Gendered Tradeoffs (pb), Pettit/Hook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Good Jobs America (pb), Osterman/Shulman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Good Jobs, Bad Jobs (hb), Kalleberg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Great Recession (pb), Grusky/Western/Wimer . . . . . . . . . . . Immigrants and Welfare (pb), Fix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Immigrants Raising Citizens (pb), Yoshikawa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Invisible Men (pb), Pettit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Just Neighbors? (pb) Telles/Sawyer/Rivera-Salgado . . . . . . . . . . . Keeping the Immigrant Bargain (pb), Louie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Making Work-Based Safety Net Work Better (pb) Heinrich/Scholz . Nurturing Dads (pb), Marsiglio/Roy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Persistence, Privilege, & Parenting (pb), Smeeding/Erikson/Jntti. Reaching for a New Deal (pb), Skocpol/Jacobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shattering Culture (pb), Good et al. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Social Movements in the World-System (pb), Smith/Wiest. . . . . . Steady Gains and Stalled Progress (pb), Magnuson/Waldfogel . . Still Connected (pb), Fischer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back! (pb), Reese. . . . . . . . . . . Tiny Publics (pb), Fine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Where Are All the Good Jobs Going? (pb), Holzer et al. . . . . . . . . Whither Opportunity? (pb), Duncan/Murnane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Who Gets Represented? (pb), Enns/Wlezien . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________
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