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Inequality in Australia

This text analyses the changing nature of inequality in Australia.

Alastair Greig (Author), Frank Lewins (Author), Kevin White (Author)

9780521818919, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 17 February 2003

320 pages, 9 tables
24.4 x 16.3 x 2.3 cm, 0.616 kg

'… highly stimulating and thought provoking … there is much to recommend in this book … I strongly recommend the book as a supplementary text or reader for courses on social inequality and social exclusion.' Journal of Social Policy

This text seeks to analyse and explain inequality, challenging traditional conceptions and providing a new critical perspective. The authors provide a comprehensive historical account of inequality, and show how that account no longer adequately explains the new and different forms experienced in recent decades. They argue that transformations in industrial, familial and political relations since the 1970s must be taken into account when trying to come to grips with the 'new' inequalities. As society has changed, new forms of inequality have emerged, conditioning the subject's very experience of identity, embodiment and politics. Inequality is understood, then, not as something that can be determined only with reference to traditional categories such as class but as that which works more insidiously. The authors demonstrate, for example, how bio and medical technologies produce inequalities. The book is at once a critical overview of contemporary inequality and a thorough-going textbook suitable for undergraduates.

1. Introduction
Part I. The Body, Society and Inequality: 2. Inequality and the sociology of the body
3. Sick bodies and inequality: class, mortality and morbidity
4. Gendered, aged and disabled bodies
Part II. The Self, Society and Understandings of Inequality: 5. Experiencing the inequality of social resources
6. Experiencing the inequality of cultural difference
7. Experiencing the inequality of life chances
Part III. Politics, Society and Inequality: 8. Collective identity, politics and the myth of egalitarianism
9. Citizenship, nation building and political struggles for equality
10. The contested nature of inequality in contemporary Australia.

Subject Areas: Sociology & anthropology [JH]

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