Ensuring Inequality: The Structural Transformation of the African-American Family, Revised Edition - Franklin, Donna L. (Independent Scholar, Independent Scholar) - Libros - Oxford University Press Inc - 9780199374878 - 8 de octubre de 2015
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Ensuring Inequality: The Structural Transformation of the African-American Family, Revised Edition 2 Revised edition

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In this revised edition of an award winning book, Donna L. Franklin and co-author Angela D. James expand and update the nuanced historical perspective used in the first edition. African American family patterns are examined with a well-documented narrative that challenges conventional understandings of the plight of African American families.


Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Preface to the Revised EditionForward to the Hardcover EditionIntroduction Part IChapter One: Slavery: A Reexamination of Its ImpactChapter Two: Sharecropping and the Rural ProletariatChapter Three: The African American Family in the Maternalistic EraChapter Four: The Arduous Transition to the Industrial North Part IIChapter Five: World War II and Its AftermathChapter Six: The Calm before the StormChapter Seven: The "Matriarchal" Black Family under SiegeChapter Eight: Family Composition and the "Underclass" DebateChapter Nine: Black Marriage Patterns: Representations and RealitiesChapter Ten: Where Are We Now? Where Do We Go from Here? NotesIndexBiographical Note: Donna L. Franklin is a nationally recognized scholar specializing in African-American families. She has held academic appointments at USC, Smith College and the University of Chicago. She is the past national Co-Chair of the Council on Contemporary Families. Angela D. James is an Associate Professor of African American Studies at Loyola Marymount University. Review Quotes:"Donna Franklin provides the reader with a very important lesson in how to understand current stresses in family life by studying the ways in which early experiences and circumstances led logically and inevitably to the present depressing, even alarming, state of family life at the end of the twentieth century. This is an important work." -John Hope Franklin, author of From Freedom to Slavery: A History of African Americans"Why are so many African-American children growing up in mother-led families? From a nuanced historical perspective, Donna Franklin offers no-holds-barred answers to this question.... She brings a provocative new perspective to America's pressing debates about poverty, fatherlessness, and how to (really) reform welfare." -Theda Skocpol, Professor of Government and Sociology, Harvard University"Ensuring Inequality is a well-crated, closely reasoned, and well-documented narrative that challenges conventional understanding of the plight of African American families." -Martin Rein, Professor of Urban Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology"Franklin's book is a well-informed, thoughful and insightful synthesis, demolishing a number of destructive fallacies as it proceeds through its highly readable chapters. It should be useful to all concerned with family, African American history, social policy and many others." -Linda Gordon, Professor of History, University of Wisconsin"No meaningful future discussion of the problems of the black family or of the American 'underclass' can occur without taking account of Donna Franklin's powerful insights, meticulous scholarship and acute analysis. This invaluable scholarly work ought to dispel many of the ideological myths surrounding these subjects." -Professor Roger Wilkins, George Mason University"One of the most important contributions to the study of the black family in recent years." - The Washington Post"Ensuring Inequality, along with Wilson's When Work Disappears, may be among the leading intellectual salvos in a public policy battle in which it might be said that the liberals are striking back." -Chicago Tribune"For years, it has been within the University of Chicago sociological tradition to study factors influencing the development and transformation of immigrant and migrant families. This volume, developed and written by a former faculty member of that institution, illustrates the best of that tradition applied to African-American families." -Contemporary Psychology

Contributor Bio:  Franklin, Donna L Donna L. Franklin was appointed the John Milner Professor at the School of Social Work, University of Southern California, 1994. Prior to that, she was on the faculty of the University of Chicago for eleven years. She is currently on a leave of absence from USC to devote more time to her writing.

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 8 de octubre de 2015
ISBN13 9780199374878
Editores Oxford University Press Inc
Género Ethnic Orientation > African American
Páginas 272
Dimensiones 156 × 234 × 16 mm   ·   426 g
Lengua Inglés  

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