AltaMira Press
Pages: 280
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7591-1132-5 • Hardback • December 2008 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7591-1245-2 • eBook • December 2008 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
Carl A. Maida is a professor of public health at UCLA, where he teaches in the Graduate Program in Oral Biology and the Institute of the Environment.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. A World of Strangers
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Global Economy and Local Dilemma
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Campaign against Stigma
Chapter 5 Chapter 4. Facing Crises through Culture
Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Strangers in the City
Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Worlds Turned Upside Down
Chapter 8 Chapter 7. The City is the Frontier
Chapter 9 Chapter 8. Common Worlds
In Pathways through Crisis anthropologist Carl Maida has brought together historical, sociological, and contemporary case studies to demonstrate how members of poor minority groups cope with crises. He uses metropolitan Los Angeles, with its multiplicity of inner-city populations, as his 'social laboratory,' describing their varied responses to epidemics, to natural disasters, and to the arrival of new generations of immigrants the settled populations may, or may not, want to absorb. Maida's book should be welcome in urban communities everywhere.
— Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles, Yale University
Carl Maida's Pathways through Crisis examines a panorama of crises that have afflicted modern Los Angeles and its environs, from manufacturing layoffs and immigrant influxes to fires and earthquakes. For each radical dislocation in LA's experience, Maida provides a national historical background, an explanation of policy governing recovery, and local institutional and community responses as well as case studies of groups and individuals who endure and overcome. This is wide-ranging sociology, public health, and local history on a grand scale. As 'disaster' becomes a metaphor for twenty-first-century life, this book, with its calm and deliberative prose and in-depth look at different kinds of urban crises, can serve as a guidebook for policy makers, health professionals, and community leaders striving to the repair torn social fabric in any urban environment.
— Robert Louis Chianese, California State University, Northridge
Carl Maida lays the groundwork for a public anthropology centered in the notion of praxis. Over twenty years of fieldwork has produced a book that is ethnographic, philosophical, historical, but also action-oriented. It is a must-read for those interested in the ethnography of Southern California and the impact of its political economy on the lived experience of working people.
— Sam Beck, Cornell University
Maida's work represents that rare enlightened amalgam of lucidity in presenting important issues that link the human condition in broad perspective to the harsh day-to-day stresses of urban existence. With focus on the complexities of the variegated Los Angeles area, he considers crisis and trauma created by significant social upheavals and skillfully—with both a realistic and hopeful viewpoint—demonstrates how competent creativity and coping can solve, or at least mitigate, the most severe human problems encountered in this century.
— Fred Massarik, University of California, Los Angeles
The various crises that Carl Maida investigates—deindustrialization, displacements and migrations, environmental degradation, earthquakes and other 'natural' disasters—are likely to become only more acute in years to come. In its case-study approach, Pathways through Crisis carefully delineates the kinds of challenges that many communities will face. But by focusing on alternative forms of problem-solving, help-seeking, and negotiating after crises, it also demonstrates the possibilities of local organization and offers reasons for hope.
— Steven Biel, Harvard University