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Introduction to Global Social Problems introduces undergraduate students to national and international social problems from a critical sociological perspective. Isaac Zvi Christiansen presents clear descriptions of each social problem, explains key concepts, and provides students with the relevant theoretical tools needed to grasp the interconnected nature of these phenomena.
This volume covers significant and interconnected issues. The book begins with an explanation of how corporate interests distort the depiction of social problems. Chapters two and three provide empirical explorations of poverty and inequality on national and global scales, together with clear and accessible expositions of relevant sociological theories. Chapter four examines health and educational inequalities exacerbated by the economic inequalities discussed in chapters two and three. Chapter five introduces students to issues of racial inequalities in the United States and abroad, while chapter six takes a comparative approach to examining crime and criminal justice. Chapter seven examines modern day imperialism and war, with special attention given to the military industrial complex, and a brief review of U.S. interventions around the world in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Chapter eight examines politics and human rights, including a critical, historical and sociological analysis of Israeli settler-colonialism and successive US/Israeli assaults on Gaza. The book closes with an examination of population and the environment, with special attention given to climate change, and the pressing contradictions between capitalism and the environment.
This textbook will be a vital resource for introductory students across the social sciences, especially in sociology, political science, and global studies. It provides critical wraparound coverage of the momentous, embedded social problems that interconnect across social, national, and regional boundaries.
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Introduction to Global Social Problems introduces undergraduate students to national and international social problems from a critical sociological perspective. Isaac Zvi Christiansen presents clear descriptions of each social problem, explains key concepts, and provides students with the relevant theoretical tools needed to grasp the interconnected nature of these phenomena.
This volume covers significant and interconnected issues. The book begins with an explanation of how corporate interests distort the depiction of social problems. Chapters two and three provide empirical explorations of poverty and inequality on national and global scales, together with clear and accessible expositions of relevant sociological theories. Chapter four examines health and educational inequalities exacerbated by the economic inequalities discussed in chapters two and three. Chapter five introduces students to issues of racial inequalities in the United States and abroad, while chapter six takes a comparative approach to examining crime and criminal justice. Chapter seven examines modern day imperialism and war, with special attention given to the military industrial complex, and a brief review of U.S. interventions around the world in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Chapter eight examines politics and human rights, including a critical, historical and sociological analysis of Israeli settler-colonialism and successive US/Israeli assaults on Gaza. The book closes with an examination of population and the environment, with special attention given to climate change, and the pressing contradictions between capitalism and the environment.
This textbook will be a vital resource for introductory students across the social sciences, especially in sociology, political science, and global studies. It provides critical wraparound coverage of the momentous, embedded social problems that interconnect across social, national, and regional boundaries.