Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 378
Trim: 7 x 9¼
978-0-7425-4586-1 • Hardback • July 2006 • $154.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7425-4587-8 • Paperback • July 2006 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4616-4151-3 • eBook • July 2006 • $59.50 • (£46.00)
Judith Blau is professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She is author of Architects and Firms, The Shape of Culture, Social Contracts and Economic Markets, Race in the Schools, and is coauthor, with Alberto Moncada of Human Rights: Beyond the Liberal Vision and Justice in the United States: Human Rights and the U.S. Constitution. She is past-president of the Southern Sociological Society and president of the U.S. chapter of Sociologists without Borders. Keri E. Iyall Smith is assistant professor of sociology at Stonehill College in Easton, MA. She teaches on the subjects of globalization, race and ethnicity, indigenous peoples, social problems, and introductory sociology. She has published articles in the fields of human rights and teaching sociology.
Chapter 1 Introduction: A Public Sociology for Human Rights
Chapter 2 The Local and the Global: Critical Globalization Studies
Chapter 3 The Local and the Global: Cosmopolitan Citizenship
Chapter 4 The Struggle for Global Society in a World System
Chapter 5 A Movement Rising: Vision and Strategy from the Bottom Up
Chapter 6 Neoliberal Globalization and the Question of Sweatshop Labor in Developing Countries or Rights
Chapter 7 Framing Social Security Rights
Chapter 8 Latin America: Capital Accumulation and the Role of International Organizations
Chapter 9 Indigenous in Itself to Indigenous for Itself
Chapter 10 Migrants, Rights, and States
Chapter 11 Understanding Disasters: Vulnerability, Sustainable Development, and Resiliency
Chapter 12 Promoting Sustainability
Chapter 13 Promoting Peace through Global Governance
Chapter 14 Ejidos: Local and Global Publics
Chapter 15 Teaching Public Sociologies
Chapter 16 What Does Feminism Have to Say about Public Sociology
Chapter 17 The Challenge to Public Sociology: Neo-Liberalism's Illusion of Inclusion
Judith Blau and Keri Iyall Smith have brought together a bracing collection of essays dealing with the mission of sociology in a neo-liberal global order. Each essay is different, yet each sets out to examine the challenges of developing a sociology that can tame our borderless capitalism and the brutalities it brings in its wake.
— Frances Fox Piven, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Sociology, Graduate School and University Center, CUNY
Blau and Smith have collected 17 papers that demonstrate ways in which sociological imagination can be applied to many of the most relevant/significant social/political issues of the period. The introduction, "A Public Sociology for Human Rights," is a continuation by Michael Burawoy of his 2004 presidential address to the American Sociological Association. The appendix is a valuable annotated guide to over 100 online resources. Blau and Smith have provided professors with an outstanding vehicle through which to stimulate and inform sociology students about the potential of the discipline. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews
In recent years Public Sociology has emerged as one of the most vibrant projects in the discipline. If you are looking for a volume that situates such work in a global context look no further than this engaging and wide-ranging collection from leaders in the field.
— Douglas Hartmann, associate professor of sociology, University of Minnesota and co-author of Ethnicity and Race: Making Identities in a Changing W