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Description

At an earlier time, sociologists C. Wright Mills, W. E. Du Bois, and Jane Addams loudly protested injustices and inequities in American society, provided critiques and analyses of systems of oppression, and challenged sociologists to be responsible critics and constructive commentators. These giants of American sociology would have applauded the 2004 meetings of the American Sociological Association. The theme of the meetings, Public Sociology, presided over by President Michael Burawoy, sparked lively debate and continues to be a spur for research and theory, and a focal point of ongoing discussions about what sociology is and should be.

This volume advances these discussions and debates, and proposes how they can be further sharpened and developed. Some authors in this volume clarify the distinctive roles that Public Sociologists can play in the discipline, in the classroom, and in larger society. Others provide critical analyses, focusing, for example, on aspects of American society and institutions, global corporate actors, sweatshop practices, international neoliberal organizations, migration policies, and U.S. environmental policies. Others advance new ways of thinking about global interdependencies that include indigenous groups, peasants, as well as societies in industrialized and developing states, and international organizations. Still others propose visions of transformative processes and practices that are progressively affirmative, even activist -- in the spirit of "A Better World is Possible!!"

This volume provides an overview of some of the major debates in sociology today and places emphasis on the importance of human rights in the "One (globalized) World" we live in today. Authors engage these debates with spirited enthusiasm and write exceptionally clearly about those topics that may be new to American readers.

Table of Contents

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

Product details

Published 13 Jul 2006
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 378
ISBN 9781461641513
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

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