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New Books Spring 2013

Russell Sage Foundation

New Books Spring 2013

Russell Sage Foundation New Books Spring 2013


CONTENTS
New Titles 1 New in Paperback 9 Recently Published 10 Selected Backlist 26 Order Form 40

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New Titles

The Rise of Women


The Growing Gender Gap in Education and What It Means for american Schools
ThOMaS a. DIPRETE and ClaUDIa BUChMaNN

hile powerful gender inequalities remain in American society, women have made substantial gains and now largely surpass men in one crucial arena: education. Women now outperform men academically at all levels and are more likely to obtain college degrees and enroll in graduate school. What accounts for this enormous reversal in the gender education gap? In The Rise of Women, Thomas DiPrete and Claudia Buchmann provide a detailed account of womens educational advantage and suggest new strategies to improve schooling outcomes for both boys and girls. The Rise of Women opens with a masterful overview of the broader societal changes that accompanied the change in gender trends in higher education. The rise of egalitarian gender norms and a growing demand for college-educated workers allowed more women to enroll in colleges and universities nationwide. As this shift occurred, women quickly reversed the historical male advantage in education. By 2010, young women in their mid-twenties surpassed their male counterparts in earning college degrees by more than eight percentage points. The authors, however, reveal an important exception: While women have achieved parity in fields such as medicine and the law, they lag far behind men in engineering and physical science degrees. To explain these trends, The Rise of Women charts the performance of boys and girls over the course of their schooling. At each stage in the education process, they consider the gender-specific impact of factors such as families, schools, peers, race, and class. Important differences emerge as early as kindergarten, where girls show higher levels of essential learning skills such as persistence and self-control. Girls also derive more intrinsic gratification from performing well on a day-to-day basis, a crucial advantage in the learning process. By contrast, boys must often navigate a conflict between their emerging masculine identity and a strong attachment to school. Families and peers play a crucial role at this juncture. The authors show the gender gap in educational attainment between children in the same families tends to be lower when the father is present and more highly educated. A strong academic climate, both among friends and at home, also tends to erode stereotypes that disconnect academic prowess and a healthy, masculine identity. Similarly, high schools with strong science curricula reduce the power of gender stereotypes concerning science and technology and encourage girls to major in scientific fields. As the value of a highly skilled workforce continues to grow, The Rise of Women argues that understanding the source and extent of the gender gap in higher education is essential to improving our schools and the economy. With its rigorous data and clear recommendations, this volume illuminates new ground for future education policies and research.

ThOMaS a. DIPRETE is professor of sociology at Columbia University. ClaUDIa BUChMaNN is professor of sociol-

ogy at Ohio State University.

978-0-87154-051-5 January 2013 paper 6 x 9 296 pp. $37.50

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New Titles

Rethinking the Financial Crisis


alaN S. BlINDER, aNDREW W. lO, and ROBERT M. SOlOW, editors
ome economic events are so disruptive that they change everything. Such is the case with the financial crisis that started in 2007 and is still a drag on the world economy. Yet enough time has now elapsed for economists to consider questions that run deeper than the usual focus on the immediate causes and consequences of the crisis. How have these stunning events changed our thinking about the efficiency of financial markets and about the role the government should play in regulating finance? In Rethinking the Financial Crisis, some of the nations most renowned economists share their assessments of the crisis and reconsider the way we think about the financial system and its role in the economy. Rethinking the Financial Crisis marshals an impressive collection of rigorous research that, in some respects, upsets the conventional wisdom about the crisis and opens up new areas for exploration. Two separate chaptersby Burton G. Malkiel and by Hersh Shefrin and Meir Statmandebate whether the facts of the financial crisis upend the efficient market hypothesis and require a more behavioral account of financial market performance. Simon Gilchrist and Egan Zakrasjek take an innovative measure of financial stress and embed it in a model of the U.S. economy to assess how disruptions in financial markets affect economic activityand how the Federal Reserve might do monetary policy better. The volume also examines the crucial role of financial innovation in the evolution of the pre-crash financial system. Thomas Philippon documents the huge increase in the size of the financial services industry relative to real GDP, and also the increasing cost per financial transaction. He suggests that the finance industry of 1900 was just as able to produce loans, bonds, and stocks as its modern counterpartand it did so more cheaply. Robert Jarrow looks in detail at some of the major types of exotic securities developed by financial engineers, such as collateralized debt obligations and credit-default swaps, reaching judgments on which make the real economy more efficient and which do not. Turning to regulatory matters. Robert Litan discusses the political economy of financial regulation before and after the crisis. He reviews the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, which he considers an imperfect but useful response to a major breakdown in market and regulatory discipline. Rethinking the Financial Crisis addresses important questions about the complex workings of American finance and shows how the study of economics needs to change to deepen our understanding of the indispensable but risky role that the financial system plays in modern economies.
alaN S. BlINDER is the Gordon S. Rentschler Memorial Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University. aNDREW W. lO is Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor at M.I.T. ROBERT M. SOlOW is Institute Professor, Emeritus, at M.I.T.

ContributorS Ben S. Bernanke alan S. Blinder Patrick Bolton J. Bradford Delong Christopher l. Foote Kristopher S. Gerardi Simon G. Gilchrist John hull Robert a. Jarrow Robert E. litan andrew W. lo Burton G. Malkiel Kevin J. Murphy Thomas Philippon Tano Santos Jos a. Scheinkman hersh Shefrin Robert M. Solow Meir Statman alan White Paul S. Willen Egon zakrajek

978-0-87154-810-8 December 2012 paper 65/8 x 9 374 pp. $49.95

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New Titles

Universal Coverage of long-Term Care in the United States


Can We Get There from here?
DOUGlaS a. WOlF and NaNCy FOlBRE, editors

s millions of baby boomers retire and age in the coming years, more American families will confront difficult choices about the long-term care of their loved ones. The swelling ranks of the disabled and elderly who need such careincluding home care, adult day care, or a nursing home stayare faced with a strained, inequitable and expensive system. How will American society and policy adapt to this demographic transition? In Universal Coverage of Long-Term Care in the United States, editors Nancy Folbre and Douglas Wolf and an expert group of care ContributorS researchers assess current U.S. long-term care policies and exercise what can be learned from other David Bell countries facing similar care demands. alison Bowes After the high-profile suspension of the Obama Administrations public long-term insurance leonard Burman Brian Burwell program in 2011, provide concrete suggestions for lowering the cost and improving the quality of Marc a. Cohen long-term care coverage in America. In a deeply personal and empirically rigorous analysis, family care Svein Olav Daatland expert Carol Levine draws crucial lessons from her experience as a caregiver for her ailing husband. Nancy Folbre She sheds light on the often fraught interactions that occur between the formal care system and famMary Jo Gibson ily caregivers and analyzes how public policy can best support long-term family care. The volume next howard Gleckman examines recent reforms in other developed countries and finds valuable lessons for American policyRobert hudson Carol levine makers. Contributors David Bell and Alison Bowes discuss the provision of personal care services in David Stevenson Scotland, which have been publicly financed since 2002. Their analysis shows that the new program Robyn Stone reduced costs, improved efficiency and allowed more recipients to receive care. The volume assesses Eileen J. Tell the political and institutional prospects for moving towards a truly universal long-term care system in Douglas a. Wolf the U.S. Robyn Stone provides a sobering overview of the formal, paid long-term care workforce in America, which is in a crisis due to increasing demand and a shortage of qualified worker. Economist Leonard Burman focuses on public finances of the long-term care system, which will come under increasing strain as more Americans rely on Medicaid to pay for their long-term care. In the volumes concluding chapter, Folbre and Wolf summarize criticisms of existing long-term care policies and outline particular reforms that can move the U.S. toward a universal system of long-term care insurance. Universal Long-Term Care Coverage provides an essential resource on how to improve the long-term care sector in America and helps advance the national debate on this pressing topic. The volume is available for free download on the Foundations website, as are the volumes individual chapters. fessor of economics at University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

DOUGlaS a. WOlF is Gerald B. Cramer Professor of Aging Studies at Syracuse University. NaNCy FOlBRE is pro-

978-1-61044-799-7 September 2012 6 x 9 340 pp. Free email download at russellsage.org PHONE (800) 524-6401 FAX (800) 688-2877 WEB www.russellsage.org

New Titles

Nashville in the New Millennium


Immigrant Settlement, Urban Transformation, and Social Belonging
JaMIE WINDERS
eginning in the 1990s, the geography of Latino migration to and within the United States started to shift. Immigrants from Central and South America increasingly bypassed the traditional gateway cities to settle in small cities, towns, and rural areas throughout the nation, particularly in the South. One popular new destinationNashville, Tennesseesaw its Hispanic population increase by over 400 percent between 1990 and 2000. Nashville, like many other such new immigrant destinations, had little to no history of incorporating immigrants into local life. How did Nashville, as a city and society, respond to immigrant settlement? How did Latino immigrants come to understand their place in Nashville in the midst of this remarkable demographic change? In Nashville in the New Millennium, geographer Jamie Winders offers one of the first extended studies of the cultural, racial, and institutional politics of immigrant incorporation in a new urban destination. Moving from schools to neighborhoods to Nashvilles wider civic institutions, Nashville in the New Millennium details how Nashvilles long-term residents and its new immigrants experienced daily life as it transformed into a multicultural city with a new cosmopolitanism. Using an impressive array of methods, including archival work, interviews, and participant observation, Winders offers a fine-grained analysis of the importance of historical context, collective memories and shared social spaces in the process of immigrant incorporation. Lacking a shared memory of immigrant settlement, Nashvilles long-term residents turned to local history to explain and interpret a new Latino presence. A site where Latino day laborers gathered, for example, became a flashpoint in Nashvilles politics of immigration in part because the area had once been a popular gathering place for area teenagers in the 1960s and 1970s. Teachers also drew from local historical memories, particularly the busing era, to make sense of their newly multicultural student body. They struggled, however, to help immigrant students relate to the regions complicated racial past, especially during history lessons on the Jim Crow era and the Civil Rights movement. When Winders turns to life in Nashvilles neighborhoods, she finds that many Latino immigrants opted to be quiet in public, partly in response to negative stereotypes of Hispanics across Nashville. Long-term residents, however, viewed this silence as evidence of a failure to adapt to local norms of being neighborly. Filled with voices from both long-term residents and Latino immigrants, Nashville in the New Millennium offers an intimate portrait of the changing geography of immigrant settlement in America. It provides a comprehensive picture of Latino migrations impact on race relations in the country and is an especially valuable contribution to the study of race and ethnicity in the South.
JaMIE WINDERS is associate professor of geography at Syracuse University.

978-0-87154-933-4 April 2013 paper 6 x 9 312 pp. $39.95

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New Titles

Coming of Political age


american Schools and the Civic Development of Immigrant youth
REBECCa M. CallahaN and ChaNDRa MUllER

s one of the fastest-growing segments of the American population, the children of immigrants are poised to reshape the countrys political future. The massive rallies for immigration rights in 2006 and the recent push for the DREAM Act, both heavily supported by immigrant youth, signal the growing political potential of this crucial group. While many studies have explored the political participation of immigrant adults, we know comparatively little about what influences civic participation among the children of immigrants. Coming of Political Age persuasively argues that schools play a central role in integrating immigrant youth into the political system. The volume shows that the choices we make now in our educational system will have major consequences for the countrys civic health as the children of immigrants grow and mature as citizens. Coming of Political Age draws from an impressive range of data, including two large surveys of adolescents in high schools and interviews with teachers and students, to provide an insightful analysis of trends in youth participation in politics. Although the children of both immigrant and native-born parents register and vote at similar rates, the factors associated with this likelihood are very different. While parental educational levels largely explain voting behavior among children of native-born parents, this volume demonstrates that immigrant childrens own education, in particular their exposure to social studies, strongly predicts their future political participation. Learning more about civic society and putting effort into these classes may encourage an interest in politics, suggesting that the high school civics curriculum remains highly relevant in an increasingly disconnected society. Interestingly, although their schooling predicts whether children of immigrants will vote, how they identify politically depends more on family and community influences. As budget cuts force school administrators to realign academic priorities, this volume argues that any cutback to social science programs may effectively curtail the political and civic engagement of the next generation of voters. While much of the literature on immigrant assimilation focuses on family and community, Coming of Political Age argues that schoolsand social science courses in particularmay be central to preparing the leaders of tomorrow. The insights and conclusions presented in this volume are essential to understand how we can encourage more participation in civic action and improve the functioning of our political system.

REBECCa M. CallahaN is assistant professor of education at the University of Texas at Austin. ChaNDRa MUllER

is professor of sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.

978-0-87154-578-7 March 2013 paper 6 x 9 192 pp. $27.50

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New Titles

Dialogue across Difference


Practice, Theory, and Research on Intergroup Dialogue
PaTRICIa GURIN, BIREN (RaTNESh) a. NaGDa, and XIMENa zIGa
ue to continuing immigration and increasing racial and ethnic inclusiveness, institutions of higher education in the United States are likely to grow ever more diverse in the 21st century. Increased inter-ethnic contact could well lead to a more fruitful learning environment that encourages collaboration, but social identity and on-campus diversity remain hotly contested issues that often raise intergroup tensions. How can we help diverse students learn from each other and gain the competencies they will need in an increasingly multicultural America? Dialogue Across Difference synthesizes three years worth of research from an innovative field experiment focused on improving intergroup understanding, relationships, and collaboration. The result is a fascinating study of the potential of intergroup dialogue to improve relations across race and gender. Intergroup dialogues bring together an equal number of students from two different groupssuch as people of color and white people, or women and mento share their perspectives and learn from each other. To test the possible impact of such courses and to develop a standard of best practice, the authors of Dialogue Across Difference incorporated various theories of social psychology, higher education, communication studies, and social work to design and implement a uniform curriculum in nine universities across the country. Students admitted to the dialogue courses learned about racial and gender inequalities through readings, role-play activities, and personal reflections. The authors tracked students progress using a mixed-method approach, including longitudinal surveys, interviews of students, and videotapes of sessions. The results are heartening: Over the course of a term, participating students developed more insight into how members of other groups perceive the world. They also demonstrated more intergroup empathy, and placed a greater value on diversity and collaborative action. Overall, the results are remarkably consistent and point to an optimistic conclusion: intergroup dialogue is more than mere talk. It fosters productive communication about and across differences in the service of greater collaboration for equity and justice. Ambitious and timely, Dialogue Across Difference presents a persuasive practical, theoretical and empirical account of the benefits of intergroup dialogue. The data and research presented in this volume offer a useful model for improving relations among different groups not just in the college setting but in the United States as well.
PaTRICIa GURIN is Nancy Cantor Distinguished University Professor Emerita of Psychology and Womens Studies at the University of Michigan. BIREN (RaTNESh) a. NaGDa is associate professor of social work and director of the Intergroup Dialogue, Education & Action (IDEA) Center at University of Washington. XIMENa zIGa is associ-

ate professor of social justice education at University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

978-0-87154-476-6 February 2013 paper 6 x 9 300 pp. $37.50

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New Titles

Whose Rights?
Counterterrorism and the Dark Side of american Public Opinion
ClEM BROOKS and JEFF MaNza
n the wake of the September 11 attacks, the U.S. government adopted a series of counterterrorism policies that radically altered the prevailing balance between civil liberties and security. These changes allowed for warrantless domestic surveillance, military commissions at Guantanamo Bay and even extralegal assassinations. Now, more than a decade after 9/11, these sharply contested measures appear poised to become lasting features of American government. What do Americans think about these policies? Where do they draw the line on what the government is allowed to do in the name of fighting terrorism? Drawing from a wealth of survey and experimental data, Whose Rights? explores the underlying sources of public attitudes toward the war on terror in a more detailed and comprehensive manner than has ever been attempted. In an analysis that deftly deploys the tools of political science and psychology, Whose Rights? addresses a vexing puzzle: Why does the counterterrorism agenda persist even as 9/11 recedes in time and the threat from Al Qaeda wanes? Authors Clem Brooks and Jeff Manza provocatively argue that American opinion, despite traditionally showing strong support for civil liberties, exhibits a dark side that tolerates illiberal policies in the face of a threat. Surveillance of American citizens, heightened airport security, the Patriot Act and targeted assassinations enjoy broad support among Americans, and these preferences have remained largely stable over the past decade. There are, however, important variations: Waterboarding and torture receive notably low levels of support, and counterterrorism activities sanctioned by formal legislation, as opposed to covert operations, tend to draw more favor. To better evaluate these trends, Whose Rights? examines the concept of threat-priming and finds that getting people to think about the specter of terrorism bolsters anew their willingness to support coercive measures. A series of experimental surveys also yields fascinating insight into the impact of national identity cues. When respondents are primed to think that American citizens would be targeted by harsh counterterrorism policies, support declines significantly. On the other hand, groups such as Muslims, foreigners, and people of Middle Eastern background elicit particularly negative attitudes and increase support for counterterrorism measures. Under the right conditions, Brooks and Manza show, American support for counterterrorism activities can be propelled upward by simple reminders of past terrorism plots and communication about disliked external groups. Whose Rights? convincingly argues that mass opinion plays a central role in the politics of contemporary counterterrorism policy. With their clarity and compelling evidence, Brooks and Manza offer much-needed insight into the policy responses to the defining conflict of our age and the psychological impact of terrorism. ology at New York University.
ClEM BROOKS is Rudy Professor of Sociology at Indiana University, Bloomington. JEFF MaNza is professor of soci-

978-0-87154-058-4 January 2013 paper 6 x 9 184 pp. $29.95

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New Titles

Rethinking Workplace Regulation


Beyond the Standard Contract of Employment
KaThERINE V.W. STONE and haRRy aRThURS, editors
uring the middle third of the 20th century, workers in most industrialized countries secured a substantial measure of job security. This standard employment contractbecame the foundation of an impressive array of rights and entitlements, including social insurance and pensions, and the right to bargain collectively. Recent changes in technology and the global economy, however, have dramatically eroded this traditional form of employment. Many countries have repealed labor laws, relaxed employee protections, and reduced state-provided benefits. As the old system of worker protection declines, how can labor regulation be improved to protect workers? In Rethinking Workplace Regulation, nineteen leading scholars from ten countries and half a dozen disciplines present a sweeping tour of the latest policy experiments that attempt to balance worker security and the new flexible employment paradigm. Edited by noted socio-legal scholars Katherine V.W. Stone and Harry Arthurs, Rethinking Workplace Regulation presents case studies on new forms of dispute resolution, job training programs, and collective representation that could serve as policy models. The volume leads with an intriguing set of essays on legal attempts to update the employment contract. Bruno Caruso reports on efforts in the European Union to constitutionalize employment and other contracts to better preserve protective principles for workers and to extend their legal impact. The volume then turns to the field of labor relations. Sociologist Jelle Visser offers a fresh assessment of the Dutch version of the flexicurity model, which attempts to balance the rise in nonstandard employment with improved social protection by indexing the minimum wage and strengthening access to health insurance, pensions, and training. The volume also illustrates the power of governments to influence labor market institutions. Legal scholars John Howe and Michael Rawling discuss Australias innovative legislation on supply chains that holds companies at the top of the supply chain responsible for employment law violations of their subcontractors. With its ambitious scope and broad inquiry, Rethinking Workplace Regulation illustrates the diverse innovations countries have developed to confront the policy challenges created by the changing nature of work. The experiments evaluated in this volume will provide inspiration and instruction for policymakers and advocates seeking to improve workers lives in this latest era of global capitalism.
KaThERINE V.W. STONE is Arjay and Frances Fearing Miller Professor of Law at University of California, Los Angeles. haRRy aRThURS is former dean of Osgoode Hall Law School and University Professor Emeritus and President Emeritus of York University.

ContributorS Takashi araki harry arthurs Thomas Bredgaard Csar G. Cantn Bruno Caruso Consuelo Chacartegui alexander J.S. Colvin Mark Freedland Morley Gunderson Thomas haipeter John howe Robert Kuttner Julia lpez Keisuke Nakamura Michio Nitta anthony ODonnell Michael Rawling Ida Regalia Katherine V.W. Stone Kendra Strauss Julie C. Suk Jelle Visser

978-0-87154-859-7 February 2013 paper 6 x 9 384 pp. $47.50

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New in Paperback

Good Jobs, Bad Jobs


The Rise of Polarized and Precarious Employment Systems in the United States, 1970s to 2000s
aRNE KallEBERG
Winner of the 2012 Academy of Management George R. Terry Award [The] definitive volume on our precarious, polarized U.S. labor market. This engagingly written tour of the American workplace illuminates its subject matter beautifully.Chris Tilly, U.C.L.A. In a lucid and compelling analysis, Arne L. Kalleberg exposes the complex dynamics driving the sharp polarization between good jobs and bad jobs, as well as the accompanying decline in employment security that has affected workers at all levels. This thoughtful book is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the situation of workers in twenty-first century America.Ruth Milkman, CUNY Graduate Center
aRNE l. KallEBERG is Kenan Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-480-3 January 2013 paper 6 x 9 312 pp. $24.95

Old assumptions, New Realities


Ensuring Economic Security for Working Families in the 21st Century
ROBERT D. PlOTNICK, MaRICa K. MEyERS, JENNIFER ROMICh, and STEVEN RaThGEB SMITh, editors
Old Assumptions, New Realities brings together an impressive set of scholars offering new perspectives drawn from a rich diversity of disciplines and methods. By highlighting the key assumptions that underlie the U.S. social welfare system and whether these assumptions are appropriate, this book offers important insights on fundamental questions for social policy and research.Maria Cancian, University of Wisconsin-Madison Ambitious and bold, Old Assumptions, New Realities challenges the reader to think about the huge gap between the old assumptions underlying the American welfare state and the new economic and social realities in which American families and children live. The editors and authors also offer a cornucopia of practical good ideas to narrow the gap. Irwin Garfinkel, Columbia University
ROBERT D. PlOTNICK is professor of public affairs at the University of Washington. MaRCIa K. MEyERS is professor of social work and public affairs at the University of Washington. JENNIFER ROMICh is associate professor of social work at the University of Washington. STEVEN RaThGEB SMITh is professor of public policy at Georgetown University.

A West Coast Poverty Center Volume


978-0-87154-698-2 January 2013 paper 6 x 9 272 pp. $29.95

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10

new in Paperback/recently Published

Britains War on Poverty


JaNE WalDFOGEl
After the poor had got poorer in the 1980s, Tony Blair promised to banish child poverty in 1999. Ever since, the poverty story has been covered in glass half-empty terms, emphasising the shortfall relative to this singularly ambitious goal. . . . Waldfogel shows that . . . the Blair-Brown governments cut child poverty in half, even while it stagnated elsewhere in the world. . . . Downbeat Brits are well aware some battles in the war on poverty have been lost. It is heartening to discover that many others have been won.The Guardian America had a war on poverty and poverty won; the United Kingdom has waged the same war and is winning it by making steady progress against child poverty. Their child poverty rate is down by half from its starting point, and children are demonstrably better off based on polices they adopted and consistently financed and delivered. Why did the Brits do so much better than the Americans? This splendid book convincingly shows why and how a true to its aims, well-financed, and persistent war on poverty can work in an Anglo-Saxon democracy. Britains War on Poverty should be widely and carefully read by social policy analysts and advocates who seek a better future for Americas young childrenTimothy M. Smeeding, University of WisconsinMadison
JaNE WalDFOGEl is professor of social work and public affairs at the Columbia University School of Social Work.

978-0-87154-898-6 January 2013 paper 6 x 9 280 pp. $29.95

Coping with Crisis


Government Reactions to the Great Recession
NaNCy BERMEO and JONaS PONTUSSON, editors
This important book provides insight into understanding the different ways countries are dealing with the economic crisis of our period and will thus be extremely valuable to all specialists of international and comparative political economy.Peter Gourevitch, University of California, San Diego Coping with Crisis speaks to the crucial mysteries of life after the global economic crisis, and to the widespread confusion about what governments should and can do to rescue us from the current malaise. An impressive group of scholars reflects on policymakers capacities for action, the relative weight of international imperatives and domestic power balances in delimiting policy solutions, the lessons of past major downturns in charting a path for current recovery, and the capacities of states to forge a new democratic consensus. This elegantly argued, wonderfully perceptive book addresses a central fear of the twenty-first century: that the new global order is unhinged from mechanisms of democratic or even elite-expert control.Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University
NaNCy BERMEO is the Nuffield Professor of comparative politics at Oxford University, Oxford, U.K. JONaS PONTUSSON is professor of comparative politics at the University of Geneva, Switzerland.

978-0-87154-076-8 September 2012 paper 6 x 9 430 pp. $42.50

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Recently Published

11

Documenting Desegregation
Racial and Gender Segregation in Private-Sector Employment Since the Civil Rights act
KEVIN STaINBaCK and DONalD TOMaSKOVIC-DEVEy
Documenting Desegregation uses remarkable data to chart the history of workplace integration since 1966, showing where, when, and hence why firms changed. The lessons are many: black mens gains stalled when Reagan took the White House; white women saw progress until the new millennium; affirmative action played a positive role. This meticulously researched, compelling book provides not only a much needed history of the revolution in the labor market, but important lessons for how the United States can continue to pursue equality of opportunity.Frank Dobbin, Harvard University With comprehensive data on private-sector employers, this book reveals the changing narratives of inequality by race and gender in American society from the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 through 2005. . . . Documenting Desegregation is a landmark contribution to our understanding of the shifting character of inequality in American society. Robert L. Nelson, Northwestern University
KEVIN STaINBaCK is assistant professor of sociology at Purdue University. DONalD TOMaSKOVIC-DEVEy is professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

978-0-87154-834-4 September 2012 paper 6 x 9 412 pp. $45.00

The american Non-Dilemma


Racial Inequality Without Racism
NaNCy DITOMaSO
Nancy DiTomaso seriously challenges the framing of racial issues in the United States. Informed by interviews with non-Hispanic whites from three areas of the country, she not only convincingly reveals how racial inequality can be maintained and perpetuated without racism, but also how most whites absolve themselves of quilt feelings about race. The American Non-Dilemma is replete with new insights on a historic domestic problem.William Julius Wilson, Harvard University Scholars in the humanities are expert at analyzing absencesthe pause in the musics beat, the white space in the painting, the protagonists missing child in the novel. But social scientists are generally very poor at analyzing nonevents. In The American Non-Dilemma, Nancy DiTomaso expertly reveals what Americans do not say, because of what they do not see. Whites inability to perceive the benefits of racial privilege, even in the context of economic struggles, helps us to understand how racial hierarchy persists in a nation committed to equal opportunity.Jennifer Hochschild, Harvard University
NaNCy DITOMaSO is professor of organization management at Rutgers University.

978-0-87154-080-5 December 2012 paper 6 x 9 432 pp. $42.50

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12

Recently Published

For love and Money


Care Provision in the United States
NaNCy FOlBRE, editor
Nancy Folbre and her colleagues have crafted an integrated, far-ranging, and incisive analysis of the contours, meaning, and possible solutions to the mounting care work crisis. A group of stellar contributors offers a treasure trove of information and ideas about how to define, measure, and value care work in all its myriad and often hidden forms. It is an understatement to say that For Love and Money is essential for anyone who cares about care work. Even more, any serious effort to address the care vacuum facing market societies should begin with this book.Kathleen Gerson, New York University For Love and Money is a rich and innovative examination of the broad care landscape, including both paid and unpaid care, in the United States. The authors look at care work in depth and in breadthfrom child care to care of people with disabilities and frail older adults. They draw a picture of care work as an activity in which all participate and all benefit. This inclusive perspective should inform public policy in the future.Carol Levine, United Hospital Fund
NaNCy FOlBRE is professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

978-0-87154-353-0 September 2012 paper 6 x 9 304 pp. $35.00

Epidemic City
The Politics of Public health in New york City
JaMES COlGROVE
Public health done right saves many more lives than medical care, and New York Citys health department has long been recognized as a leader in protecting and promoting the health of its citizens. Epidemic City shows with great insight how the agency succeedsor notto the extent that it successfully navigates the rough political seas of each era.Thomas Farley, New York City Commissioner of Health James Colgrove makes a singular contribution to our understanding of the role of the public in public health practice. It is an uproarious story of larger than life personalities and even bigger public arguments that remind us continually of the crucial role of health politics in our democracy, and the tensions between cautious science and public fear. Marshaling vast amounts of information into a compelling and tell-able tale, Colgrove has written the definitive history of what has been possible, and not, in public health in the last fifty years.Susan M. Reverby, Wellesley College
JaMES COlGROVE is associate professor at Columbia Universitys Mailman School of Public Health.

978-0-87154-063-8 May 2011 paper 6 x 9 360 pp. $29.95

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13

The Changing Face of World Cities


young adult Children of Immigrants in Europe and the United States
MaURICE CRUl and JOhN MOllENKOPF, editors Forward by CEM zDEMIR
Europe has joined North America as a region of immigration and cities such as such as Amsterdam, Berlin, Brussels, Paris, Stockholm, and Vienna have become major immigrant gateways, along with traditional gateways such as New York and Los Angeles. The Changing Face of World Cities offers the first truly comparative analysis of patterns and processes of assimilation and integration in Europe and the United States. In a model of collaborative scholarship, the multinational team assembled by Maurice Crul and John Mollenkopf use comparable methods and data to shed analytic light on the barriers and bridges that immigrants and their children face in different national settings. It is essential reading for students of immigration on both sides of the Atlantic.Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University Essential reading for all immigration scholars. . . . Anyone who cares about the future of either Europe or the United States must read this book.Alex Stepick, Florida International University
MaURICE CRUl is professor of sociology at Erasmus University Rotterdam and the Free University of Amsterdam. JOhN MOllENKOPF is Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Sociology at The Graduate Center, City

University of New York.

978-0-87154-633-3 September 2012 paper 6 x 9 324 pp. $49.95

The Biological Consequences of Socioeconomic Inequalities


BaRBaRa WOlFE, WIllIaM N. EVaNS, and TERESa E. SEEMaN
This interdisciplinary book provides essential reading for researchers in the social and biological sciences interested in the income-health gradient, lays a useful foundation for the new field of individually customized medicine, and improves our understanding of how behaviors, stress, and cognitive-emotional processes lead to variation in biological functioning and disease.Randall P. Ellis, Boston University A very timely book by an interdisciplinary group of experts that presents compelling new information about the neurobiological and systemic health consequences of socioeconomic inequalities. . . . The emphasis on biomarkers is particularly important for demonstrating how the social environment of inequality gets under the skin and presents both a challenge and an opportunity for this important field.Bruce S. McEwen, The Rockefeller University
BaRBaRa WOlFE is professor of public affairs, economics, and population health sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. WIllIaM N. EVaNS is Keough-Hesburge Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at the University of Notre Dame. TERESa E. SEEMaN is professor of medicine and epidemiology in the School of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles.

978-0-87154-892-4 December 2012 paper 6 x 9 292 pp. $42.50

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14

recently Published

From Parents to Children


The Intergenerational Transmission of advantage
JOhN ERMISCh, MaRKUS JNTTI, and TIMOThy M. SMEEDING, editors
Parents socioeconomic status affects later child outcomes in all of the advanced nations studied in this fascinating book, but nowhere is this relationship stronger than in the United States. How can we make childrens life chances more equal without interfering with the rights of parents and the efficiency of the economy? This book does not provide all of the answers but it contains a wealth of data and analysis with important implications for both research and policy. From Parents to Children is a tour de force.Isabel Sawhill, The Brookings Institution Intergenerational transmission of resources and rewards has gained more interest with the increase in income inequality during the last thirty years. In this book a number of first-rate scholars review how outcomes depend on various conditions in childhood. The role of parental socioeconomic and educational resources as well as that of societal institutions, like child care and schools, is studied for several countries in America and Europe. This broad perspective gives every reader, regardless of prior knowledge, an increased understanding of the mechanisms through which parental advantage is transferred to children. Robert Erikson, Stockholm University
JOhN ERMISCh is professor of economics at the Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of Essex. MaRKUS JNTTI is professor of economics at the Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University. TIMOThy M. SMEEDING is director of the Institute for Research on Poverty, University of WisconisinMadison.

978-0-87154-045-4 May 2012 paper 6 x 9 520 pp. $59.95

Persistence, Privilege, and Parenting


The Comparative Study of Intergenerational Mobility
TIMOThy M. SMEEDING, ROBERT ERIKSON, and MaRKUS JNTTI, editors
In the last decade, the growing body of research by sociologists and economists showing that advantages in one generation are inherited by the next has clearly filtered through to policymakers who now consider economic mobility to be an important policy objective. Persistence, Privilege, and Parenting breaks new ground by probing deeper into the various factors over the life course that contribute to differences in intergenerational mobility across countries. The work in this volume advances our knowledge and will contribute to policy discussions going forward.Bhash Mazumder, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
TIMOThy M. SMEEDING is director of the Institute for Research on Poverty and Distinguished Professor of Public Affairs at the University of WisconsinMadison. ROBERT ERIKSON is professor of sociology at the Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University. MaRKUS JNTTI is professor of economics at the Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University.

978-0-87154-031-7 September 2011 paper 6 x 9 392 pp. $49.95

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15

Whither Opportunity?
Rising Inequality, Schools, and Childrens life Chances
GREG J. DUNCaN and RIChaRD J. MURNaNE, editors
Whither Opportunity? examines in detail and from all conceivable angles the power of class to determine the developmental fate of Americas children. From this volume, we learn that children in communities experiencing unemployment do worse in school even if their own families are safe from its reach; that test score gaps by income are larger and growing faster than the gaps between black and white; that expenditures by high-income families on enrichment of all kinds is vastly larger than what low-income families can afford. All of this adds up to a new and troubling examination of the ways in which income inequality is pressing the nations children, youth, neighborhoods, schools, and families. I dont often use the overworked phrase, must read, but it most definitely applies to this book.Katherine S. Newman, Johns Hopkins University
GREG J. DUNCaN is Distinguished Professor in the Department of Education at the University of California, Irvine. RIChaRD J. MURNaNE is Thompson Professor of Education and Society at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Copublished with the Spencer Foundation


978-0-87154-372-1 September 2011 paper 65/8 x 9 572 pp. $49.95

The Great Recession


DaVID B. GRUSKy, BRUCE WESTERN, and ChRISTOPhER WIMER, editors
This is the first systematic, scholarly analysis of the initial effects of the Great Recession on the well-being of American workers and families. The authors analyze historical and recent data and document who lost their jobs, their homes, their financial assets; how the Federal stimulus bill enhanced the safety net for the poor and unemployed; and how individuals, families, and institutions responded to the economic shocks. Taken together, the chapters present a gloomy forecast. Job losses have been greater and the recovery slower than in other recessions, and the deficit mania that prevents new Federal stimulus and encourages state and local government layoffs mean that unemployment and poverty will remain high for at least the next five years.Sheldon H. Danziger, University of Michigan A first-rate team of social scientists contributes an impressively thorough set of analyses that go well beyond journalistic accounts, which tend to overemphasize the dramatic, the short-term, and the anecdotal. Yet The Great Recession is timely, important, and novelessential reading about the broad implications of the great economic crisis of our time.Robert D. Mare, University of California, Los Angeles
DaVID B. GRUSKy is professor of sociology at Stanford University. BRUCE WESTERN is professor of sociology at Harvard University. ChRISTOPhER WIMER is associate director of the Collaboration for Poverty Research and senior editor of Pathways at the Stanford Center for the Study of Poverty and Inequality.

978-0-87154-421-6 October 2011 paper 6 x 9 344 pp. $37.50

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16

recently Published

Good Jobs america


Making Work Better for Everyone
PaUl OSTERMaN and BETh ShUlMaN
At a time of fierce debate over Americas economic future, this fresh and deeply researched book provides a welcome antidote to the complacent conventional wisdom that good jobs are gone for good. [The authors] produce a powerful, informed case for making bad jobs better. What Osterman and Shulman show is that doing so would benefit not just low-wage workers. It would also benefit our society and our economy more broadly.Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University There is no more pressing question than how we insure that American workers are able to lay claim to jobs that pay well and hold the promise of economic security. Paul Osterman and his late coauthor, Beth Shulman . . . call for serious union reform, the mobilization of public opinion to pressure firms to do better, and insisting that citizens return the question of good jobs to the campaign trail. There are no easy solutions, but at last we have a book that puts the options on the table. We will be debating its conclusions for a long time to come.Katherine Newman, Johns Hopkins University
PaUl OSTERMaN is NTU professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, as well as a member of the Department of Urban Planning at MIT. BETh ShUlMaN was senior fellow at Demos, chair of the Board of the National Employ-

ment Law Project, and co-chair of the Fairness Initiative on Low-Wage Work.

978-0-87154-663-0 September 2011 paper 6 x 9 200 pp. $24.95

Insufficient Funds
Savings, assets, Credit, and Banking among low-Income households
REBECCa M. BlaNK and MIChaEl S. BaRR, editors
Insufficient Funds is a comprehensive presentation of what is known about the asset holdings and use of financial services by low-income U.S. households. . . . The volume is well-written, balanced, and cohesive. Insufficient Funds is undoubtedly the best single source for readers seeking a well-informed, thoughtful treatment of the issues.John P. Caskey, Swarthmore College This thorough volume from leading scholars provides a textured portrait of the relationships lowincome households maintain with formal and informal financial services. Ranging from the latest theory to comparative data analysis to policy innovation, Insufficient Funds is a must read for any scholar, student, or policymaker interested in credit, savings, or asset accumulation in their role as barriers to escaping poverty.Dalton Conley, New York University A volume in the National Poverty Centers Series on Poverty and Public Policy
REBECCa M. BlaNK is Robert S. Kerr Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. MIChaEl S. BaRR is professor of law

at the University of Michigan Law School.

978-0-87154-470-4 2011 paper 65/8 x 9 336 pp. $24.95

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17

Where are all the Good Jobs Going?


What National and local Job Quality and Dynamics Mean for U.S. Workers
haRRy J. hOlzER, JUlIa I. laNE, DaVID B. ROSENBlUM, and FREDRIK aNDERSSON
Reversing the rise in income inequality and the increasing polarization of the labor market will take a concerted focus on both the quality of jobs employers create and the education and skills of the workforce. Using a unique matched data set of employers and employees, Where Are All the Good Jobs Going? provides a new take on some old issues, importantly on the relationship between job quality and job displacement and on strategies metropolitan areas can use to support new businesses that create good jobs. Eileen Appelbaum, senior economist, Center for Economic and Policy Research
haRRy J. hOlzER is professor of public policy at Georgetown University. JUlIa I. laNE is program director of Science of Science & Innovation Policy at the National Science Foundation, research fellow at IZA, and former senior research fellow at the U.S. Census Bureau. DaVID B. ROSENBlUM is senior economic analyst, NORC. FREDRIK aNDERSSON is an economist in the Economics Department of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, U.S. Department of the Treasury.

978-0-87154-458-2 January 2011 paper 6 x 9 222 pp. $24.95

Reaching for a New Deal


ambitious Governance, Economic Meltdown, and Polarized Politics in Obamas First Two years
ThEDa SKOCPOl and laWRENCE R. JaCOBS, editors
This is social science at its best, using the insights of the academy to help shed light on contemporary politics. In this collection, some of the nations best political scientists offer a powerful look at the first years of the Obama presidency. This balanced and thoughtful book provides a wonderful analysis of the institutional and organizational contexts within which this administration has operated, as well as the strategic choices that enabled Obama to build a sizable legislative record. Reaching for a New Deal helps us understand how the president was able to craft so much ambitious legislation even as the political atmosphere became more polarized with each passing day. Through Obama, we learn more about why parties can make progress in some areas of policy despite institutional obstacles but not others. A must read for anyone interested in a serious look at contemporary politics.Julian E. Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs, Princeton University
ThEDa SKOCPOl is the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard University. laWRENCE R. JaCOBS is the Walter F. and Joan Mondale Chair for Political Studies and director of the Center for the Study of Politics

and Governance in the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute and Deparment of Political Science at the University of Minnesota.
978-0-87154-855-9 August 2011 paper 6 x 9 456 pp. $27.50

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18

Recently Published

The Broken Table


The Detroit Newspaper Strike and the State of american labor
ChRIS RhOMBERG
In prose both accessible and dramatic, Chris Rhomberg has given us a profound and carefully detailed analysisof a landmark struggle between labor and management in the 90s. But Professor Rhombergs work is not only an authoritative chronicle of the 1995 Detroit newspaper strikeone of the most important cases to come before me during my National Labor Relations Board tenure. It is also a broad, sweeping, and profound examination of the state of labor-management relations today and historically in the United States and an important discussion about the ongoing need for labor law reform. His book effectively links the changing bargaining table and its erosion to the growing inequality in our society. The Broken Table is must reading for all concerned with the changing labor landscape, Detroit, and the political-economic challenges ahead.William B. Gould IV, chairman, National Labor Relations Board (19941998)
ChRIS RhOMBERG is associate professor of sociology at Fordham University.

978-0-87154-717-0 April 2012 paper 6 x 9 398 pp. $47.50

They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back!


Welfare activism in an Era of Retrenchment
EllEN REESE
With this beautifully conceived and passionate study of grassroots mobilization after the end of welfare as we know it, Ellen Reese reminds us that elites may make policy, but they do not do so alone, but rather in the face of struggle and protest by those who refuse to have their dignity, rights, and livelihood curtailed in the name of neoliberalism.Eileen Boris, University of California, Santa Barbara In this meticulously researched book, Ellen Reese looks not at why welfare reform was passed, but how it was implemented, arguing that implementation became an opportunity for policymaking. She brilliantly examines how citizens mobilized in welfare rights campaigns to replace public assistance for legal immigrants, to respond to the privatization of welfare services, to organize welfare recipients as workers, and to expand and improve subsidized childcare.Joya Misra, University of Massachusetts Amherst
EllEN REESE is associate professor of sociology at the University of California, Riverside.

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-714-9 November 2011 paper 6 x 9 312 pp. $42.50

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19

Invisible Men
Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress
BECKy PETTIT
In this brilliant and timely book, Becky Pettit systematically upends a generation of social science research on American racial progress. With clear prose and convincing evidence, Invisible Men shows how the failure to properly count prisoners has distorted official statistics on education, employment, politics, and health. The books policy importance cannot be overstated: unless and until we improve data quality, our policy efforts will be guided by a funhouse mirror image rather than reliable and accurate social facts. Even as Invisible Men demonstrates that things are sometimes worse than they appear, however, it offers a hopeful reform agenda for improving our data and our policy prescriptions.Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota
BECKy PETTIT is professor of sociology at the University of Washington.

978-0-87154-667-8 June 2012 paper 6 x 9 156 pp. $29.95

Counted Out
Same-Sex Relations and americans Definitions of Family
BRIaN POWEll, CaThERINE BOlzENDahl, ClaUDIa GEIST, and lala CaRR STEElMaN
Winner of the 2011 William J. Goode Award from the ASAs Section on Family Counted Out . . . shows the ambivalence Americans have about including as family those arrangements that are not based on marriageheterosexual cohabitation and same-sex parenting and partnering. Using rich and unique data, Counted Out also illuminates the limits of the gender revolution. Strong gender biases continue to influence who Americans think should have custody of children following divorce. Americans also continue to overwhelmingly endorse the practice of women taking their husbands name at marriage. Anyone interested in family change or change in gender norms will find much food for thought in this exceptionally well-argued and insightful volume.Suzanne Bianchi, University of California, Los Angeles
BRIaN POWEll is James H. Rudy Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. CaThERINE BOlzENDahl is assistant professor of sociology in the School of Social Sciences at the University of California, Irvine. ClaUDIa GEIST is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Utah. lala CaRR STEElMaN is professor in the Depart-

ment of Sociology at the University of South Carolina.

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-688-3 June 2012 paper 6 x 9 340 pp. $24.95

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Recently Published

Family Consequences of Childrens Disabilities


DENNIS P. hOGaN
Dennis Hogan harnesses a plethora of data sources to document the pervasive effects of childhood disability from a family perspective. This comprehensive book highlights the very real challenges that children and youth with disabilities and their families face, demonstrating the ways in which public and private supports can ease or exacerbate those challenges.Valerie Leiter, Simmons College Dennis Hogan has written a ground-breaking study of the consequences that raising a child with a disability has for family life. His empathy for these families is clear, and his analyses are rigorous and insightful. I know of no other treatment of the subject that is like it.Andrew J. Cherlin, Benjamin H. Griswold, III, Johns Hopkins University
DENNIS hOGaN is Robert E. Turner Distinguished Professor of Population Studies at Brown University.

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-457-5 April 2012 paper 6 x 9 132 pp. $27.50

Nurturing Dads
Social Initiatives for Contemporary Fatherhood
WIllIaM MaRSIGlIO and KEVIN ROy
In this wide-ranging, insightful, and kaleidoscopic journey across the increasingly diverse social landscape of American fatherhood, William Marsiglio and Kevin Roy breathe fresh air into a stale debate. They illumine mens growing aspirations for close involvement in their childrens lives, even when they face economic disadvantage and physical separation. Nurturing Dads makes it abundantly clear that it is time to jettison narrow definitions of manhood and develop social policies that reach well beyond the limited model of fathers as only breadwinners.Kathleen Gerson, New York University Nurturing Dads outlines some of the most pressing challenges facing fathers today. Written by two leading fathering scholars, it makes timely and important contributions to our understandings of the relationships between social policies and mens caregiving. This beautifully written book is a must read for academics, policymakers, and community leaders interested in learning how to promote nurturing and engaged fatherhood.Andrea Doucet, Brock University
WIllIaM MaRSIGlIO is professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminology & Law at the University of Florida. KEVIN ROy is associate professor of family science at the University of Maryland.

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-566-4 January 2012 paper 6 x 9 312 pp. $35.00

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21

Tiny Publics
a Theory of Group action and Culture
GaRy alaN FINE
In Tiny Publics, Gary Alan Fine synthesizes over three decades of his research to show that there is a substantial gain to understanding how and why small groups create civil society and social order. The implications are intuitive, compelling, and profound, and should lead us to reconsider everything from art worlds to the Arab Spring. All in all, it is further evidence that Fine is one of the most gifted ethnographers and sociologists of our time.Damon J. Phillips, Columbia University Using such evocative phrases as sociological miniaturism, the sociology of the local, idiocultures, and peopled organizations, Gary Alan Fine has long offered the best and most insistent reminder to sociologists to attend to the interactional fields of small groups in order to understand . . . well, anything. In his new book Tiny Publics, Fine continues in this rich vein, showing how large-scale social forces are always deeply embedded in, and inexorably the product of, the microdynamics of group settings.Amy Binder, University of California, San Diego
GaRy alaN Fine is professor of sociology at Northwestern University.

A volume in the Russell Sage Foundation Series on Trust


978-0-87154-432-2 March 2012 paper 6 x 9 234 pp. $32.50

Facing Social Class


how Societal Rank Influences Interaction
SUSaN T. FISKE and hazEl ROSE MaRKUS, editors
Class may be less visible than gender or skin color, but it is no less consequential. Statistical studies document robust correlations between class and vital events. Facing Social Class digs into those correlations to uncover some of the ways people use and experience class distinctions in daily life and at lifes turning points. Leading scholars summarize what is known in their specialties and set the research agenda for this decade. Their fruitful collaboration as psychologists and sociologists shows that progress depends on an interdisciplinary approach to the study of mind, self, and our evermore unequal society.Michael Hout, University of California, Berkeley Drawing together perspectives from sociology, psychology, anthropology, linguistics, and law, this volume explores the often invisible ways that social class shapes our ideas, institutions, interactions, and identities. Susan T. Fiske and Hazel Rose Markus have brought together state-of-the-art contributions from the social sciences to reveal often overlooked dynamics in the production and reproduction of social class in America.Devah Pager, Princeton University
SUSaN T. FISKE is Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology at Princeton University. hazEl ROSE MaRKUS is Davis-

Brack Professor in the Behavioral Sciences in the Department of Psychology at Stanford University.

978-0-87154-479-7 April 2012 paper 6 5/8 x 9 1/4 272 pp. $37.50

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Recently Published

The Diversity Paradox


Immigration and the Color line in Twenty-First Century america
JENNIFER lEE and FRaNK D. BEaN
Winner of the 2011 Otis Dudley Duncan Award Using an impressive arsenal of quantitative and qualitative data, Jennifer Lee and Frank Bean offer an authoritative analysis of the color line in American society, revealing a remarkable paradox at the heart of contemporary intergroup relations. Although immigration has dramatically increased the share of Asians and Latinos and patterns of intermarriage and self-identification reveal greater racial and ethnic mixing than ever before, one divide continues to stand out: that between African Americans and everyone else. Their careful analysis challenges both glib assertions of a post-racial order as well as pronouncements about the immutability of Americas racial categories. Racial meanings are clearly changing, but whether they will change enough to overcome the age-old American Dilemma remains to be seen.Douglas S. Massey, The Woodrow Wilson School
JENNIFER lEE is professor of sociology at the University of California, Irvine. FRaNK D. BEaN is Chancellors Professor

of Sociology and Economics and director of the Center for Research on Immigration, Population, and Public Policy at the University of California, Irvine.

978-0-87154-513-8 March 2012 paper 6 x 9 248 pp. $24.95

asian american Political Participation


Emerging Constituents and Their Political identities
JaNEllE WONG, S. KaRThICK RaMaKRIShNaN, TaEKU lEE, and JaNE JUNN
Asian American Political Participation provides a revealing and nuanced analysis of the political attitudes and voting preferences of the rapidly growing, highly diverse, and increasingly influential population of sixteen million Asian Americans. [The authors have] made an exceptional contribution to public knowledge and research about the growing impact and visibility of Asian American voters, donors, activists, and politicians.Don T. Nakanishi, University of California, Los Angeles In this theoretically nuanced and empirically sophisticated study, these brilliant young political scientists not only decipher the paradoxes of Asian American political engagement, they show why it requires us to redefine our understanding of political participation in Americaand how to do so. Destined to be a classic.John Mollenkopf, Center for Urban Research, CUNY Graduate Center
JaNEllE WONG is associate professor of political science and American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California. S. KaRThICK RaMaKRIShNaN is associate professor of political science at the University of California, Riverside. TaEKU lEE is professor of political science and law at the University of California, Berkeley. JaNE JUNN is

professor of political science at the University of Southern California.

978-0-87154-962-4 October 2011 paper 6 x 9 392 pp. $29.95

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23

Keeping the Immigrant Bargain


The Costs and Rewards of Success in america
VIVIaN lOUIE
Immigrants, past and present, endure great hardships in order to secure a better life for their children. In todays America the path to that better life runs directly through often deeply troubled public schools. In Keeping the Immigrant Bargain, Vivian Louie presents a clear-eyed and rigorous assessment of why some immigrants have used the educational system to great advantage, while others have been consistently failed by it.Philip Kasinitz, The City University of New York Keeping the Immigrant Bargain makes a significant contribution to a national issue that transcends immigrants: how to enable working class and poor (or moderate income and poor) youngsters get into, survive, and succeed in four-year colleges. [Louies] reporting on the familial, institutional, and other supporting people and systems that help them succeed is particularly valuable. Louies writing combines subtle analysis and empathic narrative, and the book is recommended most highly to researchers, educators, and policymakers dedicated to increasing access to college for less affluent Americans.Herbert J. Gans, Columbia University
VIVIaN lOUIE is associate professor of education at the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University.

978-0-87154-564-0 June 2012 paper 6 x 9 260 pp. $39.95

Immigrants Raising Citizens


Undocumented Parents and Their young Children
hIROKazU yOShIKaWa
In all the debates about immigration in the United States, very little attention has been paid to how tomorrows citizensthe children of todays immigrantsare affected by their parents undocumented status. Immigrants Raising Citizens provides a compelling story about the scarring effects of the lack of access to good jobs and social services among undocumented parents on their citizen children. The failure to provide such parents with the same opportunities available to other adults, whether in the job market or in the community, doesnt just affect them; it also affects their children and the future productivity of the nation.Isabel V. Sawhill, The Brookings Institution Dr. Yoshikawas book provides a fresh look at the challenges confronting immigrant families with young children in the nations largest city. It combines theory and evidence from the fields of demography, sociology, and child development. Above all, it puts a human face on immigrant parents and children by following the lives of several families in detail instead of relying solely on cold analysis of hard data, as is too often the case with the academic literature on this important subject.Randy Capps, Migration Policy Institute
hIROKazU yOShIKaWa is professor of education in Harvard Universitys Graduate School of Education. 978-0-87154-971-6 February 2012 paper 6 x 9 208 pp. $24.95

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Recently Published

Steady Gains and Stalled Progress


Inequality and the Black-White Test Score Gap
KaThERINE MaGNUSON and JaNE WalDFOGEl, editors
[Steady Gains and Stalled Progress] offers new evidence that highlights the complexities of racial inequality and provides a basis for cautious optimism for the future.Adam Gamoran, University of WisconsinMadison The black-white gap in test scores is one of the most stubborn and mystifying challenges facing the United States. And while it is hard to separate fact from statistical artifact and personal belief, Katherine Magnuson and Jane Waldfogel have produced a thorough and insightful volume that accomplishes just that. Even experts in education policy will come away having learned something new.Cecilia E. Rouse, Princeton University
KaThERINE MaGNUSON is assistant professor of social work and a faculty affiliate at the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of WisconsinMadison. JaNE WalDFOGEl is professor of social work and public affairs at

Columbia University.

978-0-87154-473-5 September 2011 paper 6 x 9 368 pp. $35.00

Shattering Culture
american Medicine Responds to Cultural Diversity
MaRy-JO DElVECChIO GOOD, SaRah S. WIllEN, SETh DONal haNNah, KEN VICKERy, and laWRENCE TaESENG PaRK, editors
Shattering Culture . . . carefully examines the mantra of cultural competence. While valuing different cultural frameworks and emphasizing the need to understand patients from their own perspectives, the authors show how some elements of respect for diversity must be rethought in the face of hard realities of running a health care system.Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University Shattering Culture humanizes the struggle to provide culturally grounded health care to a patient population that refuses to fit neatly into our tidy conceptual boxes. Drawing from their own insider and outsider perspectives, the editors and authors deliver an unusually empathic yet critical analysis of the various players and practices that interact to shape patient carefor better and for worse.Doris F. Chang, New School for Social Research
MaRy-JO DElVECChIO GOOD is professor of social medicine at Harvard Medical School. SaRah S. WIllEN is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Connecticut. SETh DONal haNNah is lecturer in sociology at Harvard University. KEN VICKERy is director of external fellowships at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. laWRENCE TaESENG PaRK is assistant professor of psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital.

978-0-87154-060-7 November 2011 paper 6 x 9 260 pp. $37.50

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25

Brokered Boundaries
Creating Immigrant Identity in anti-Immigrant Times
DOUGlaS S. MaSSEy and MaGaly SNChEz R.
A compelling and sobering account of the lives of immigrants in a time of economic downturn and harsh anti-immigrant policies. Based on interviews with first- and second-generation, mostly undocumented, Latinos in the urban northeast, Brokered Boundaries shows how they develop a new sense of themselves and American society in the face of exclusionary barriers. Anyone wanting to understand how immigrants are navigating life in the United States today should read this important, well-written, and thought-provoking book.Nancy Foner, City University of New York Based on statistical and ethnographic accounts, Douglas Massey and Magaly Snchez have written a book that offers an insightful portrait of new Latin American immigrants and also challenges the prevailing anti-immigrant hysteria. Charles Hirschman, University of Washington
DOUGlaS S. MaSSEy is Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School. MaGaly SNChEz R. is senior researcher at the Office of Population Research at Princeton University.

978-0-87154-580-0 March 2012 paper 6 x 9 316 pp. $24.95

Just Neighbors?
Research on african american and latino Relations in the United States
EDWaRD TEllES, MaRK Q. SaWyER, and GaSPaR RIVERa-SalGaDO, editors
Just Neighbors? is a needed and welcome assessment of African American and Latino relations. As more of the nations major cities become majority minority a key question becomes how people and communities of color interact with, understand, and affect one another. Edward Telles and colleagues have pulled together an excellent set of articles that in a rich and mutually informing manner span the fields of anthropology, political science, and sociology. The work highlights the dynamics of group identity and stereotyping processes, of local context and characteristics particularly within the labor market, and especially of community leadership in molding the tenor of group relations. Just Neighbors? provides an important and broad-gauge baseline for serious scholarship on black-Latino relations. Lawrence D. Bobo, Harvard University
EDWaRD TEllES is professor of sociology at Princeton University and vice president of the American Sociological Association. MaRK Q. SaWyER is associate professor of African American studies and political science at the University of California, Los Angeles. GaSPaR RIVERa-SalGaDO is project director at the UCLA Center for Labor Research and Education.

978-0-87154-828-3 September 2011 paper 6 x 9 388 pp. $39.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

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26

Selected Backlist
Credit Markets for the Poor
Patrick Bolton and howard Rosenthal, editors
978-0-87154-132-1 2005 cloth 320 pp. $47.50

SoCiAl WelfAre AnD Work


america Works: Critical Thoughts on the Exceptional U.S. labor Market
Richard B. Freeman
978-0-87154-326-4 2008 paper 206 pp. $15.95

The Declining Significance of Gender?


Francine D. Blau, Mary C. Brinton, and David B. Grusky, editors
978-0-87154-370-7 2008 paper 308 pp. $24.95

at home and abroad: U.S. labor Market Performance in International Perspective


Francine D. Blau and lawrence M. Kahn
978-0-87154-082-9 2007 paper 328 pp. $23.95

Do Prisons Make Us Safer? The Benefits and Costs of the Prison Boom
Steven Raphael and Michael a. Stoll, editors
978-0-87154-860-3 2009 cloth 304 pp. $39.95

Barriers to Reentry? The labor Market for Released Prisoners in Post-Industrial america
Shawn Bushway, Michael a. Stoll, and David F. Weiman, editors
978-0-87154-087-4 2007 cloth 386 pp. $37.50

Downsizing in america: Reality, Causes, and Consequences


William J. Baumol, alan S. Blinder, and Edward N. Wolff
978-0-87154-138-3 2005 paper 336 pp. $19.95

Beyond the Boycott: labor Rights, human Rights, and Transnational activism
Gay W. Seidman

Egalitarian Capitalism: Jobs, Incomes, and Growth in affluent Countries


lane Kenworthy

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-762-0 2009 paper 192 pp. $18.95

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-452-0 2007 paper 232 pp. $18.95

Financing low-Income Communities: Models, Obstacles, and Future Directions

Changing Poverty, Changing Policies


Maria Cancian and Sheldon Danziger, editors

Julia Sass Rubin, editor


978-0-87154-711-8 2007 cloth 344 pp. $42.50

Finding Jobs: Work and Welfare Reform


David Card and Rebecca M. Blank, editors
978-0-87154-159-8 2002 paper 512 pp. $19.95

High rates of poverty were the shame of American capitalism even before the great recession of the late 2000s. The recession will raise poverty to levels not seen since the early 1960s. What can we do? Changing Poverty, Changing Policies documents the factors and decisions that have kept poverty rates high even in good times and then considers evidence-based policies that could help turn the tide in the war on povertyat least when the recovery comes. Whether you regard the policies as too modest or too far-reaching, the book is invaluable to understanding past failures to reduce poverty and in devising ways to improve on our abysmal record. Richard B. Freeman, National Bureau of Economic Research
978-0-87154-310-3 2009 paper 440 pp. $42.50

how to house the homeless


Ingrid Gould Ellen and Brendan OFlaherty, editors
978-0-87154-454-4 2010 cloth 184 pp. $37.50

Jobs for the Poor: Can labor Demand Policies help?


Timothy J. Bartik

Copublished with the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research


978-0-87154-098-0 2007 paper 488 pp. $17.95

laboring Below the line: The New Ethnography of Poverty, low-Wage Work, and Survival in the Global Economy
Frank Munger, editor
978-0-87154-619-7 2007 paper 336 pp. $22.50

PHONE (800) 524-6401

FAX (800) 688-2877

WEB www.russellsage.org

Selected Backlist
Making Ends Meet: how Single Mothers Survive Welfare and low-Wage Work
Kathryn Edin and laura lein
978-0-87154-142-0 2000 paper 454 pp. $22.00

27

Pension Puzzles
Social Security and the Great Debate
Melissa hardy and lawrence hazelrigg

Making Work Pay: The Earned Income Tax Credit and Its Impact on americas Families
Bruce D. Meyer and Douglas holtz-Eakin, editors
978-0-87154-599-2 2002 cloth 400 pp. $49.95

Moving Up or Moving On: Who advances in the low-Wage labor Market?


Fredrik andersson, harry J. holzer, and Julia I. lane
978-0-87154-056-0 2006 paper 192 pp. $14.95

The New Dollars and Dreams: american Incomes and Economic Change
Frank levy
978-0-87154-515-2 1999 paper 250 pp. $16.95

Melissa Hardy and Lawrence Hazelrigg clear the air on the Social Security debate. They set their sociological sights on the econometric battle over rescue strategies versus privatization, showing that arguments about efficiency are invariably colored by politics. In reviewing arguments and evidence for each side, they call for an open debate in which politicians and policy wonks put all their cards on the table. This lucid and even-handed book offers the non-expert an introduction to the issues that is engaging, yet never dumbed down. It challenges the expert to overcome partisan politics.Frank Dobbin, Harvard University

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-334-9 2010 paper 304 pp. $23.95

On the Job: Is long-Term Employment a Thing of the Past?


David Neumark, editor
978-0-87154-618-0 2000 cloth 544 pp. $59.95

Social Programs That Work


Jonathan Crane, editor
978-0-87154-174-1 2000 paper 336 pp. $14.95

Public Policy and the Income Distribution


alan J. auerbach, David Card, and John M. Quigley, editors
978-0-87154-046-1 2006 cloth 424 pp. $45.00

Staircases or Treadmills? labor Market Intermediaries and Economic Opportunity in a Changing Economy
Chris Benner, laura leete, and Manuel Pastor
978-0-87154-169-7 2007 cloth 312 pp. $32.50

Putting Poor People to Work: how the Work-First Idea Eroded College access for the Poor
Kathleen M. Shaw, Sara Goldrick-Rab, Christopher Mazzeo, and Jerry a. Jacobs
978-0-87154-776-7 2009 paper 216 pp. $21.50

Stories Employers Tell: Race, Skill, and hiring in america


Phillip Moss and Chris Tilly
978-0-87154-632-6 2003 paper 336 pp. $15.95

The Roaring Nineties: Can Full Employment Be Sustained?


alan B. Krueger and Robert M. Solow, editors

Copublished with the Century Foundation


978-0-87154-817-7 2002 cloth 576 pp. $49.95

What Employers Want: Job Prospects for less-Educated Workers


harry J. holzer
978-0-87154-388-2 1999 paper 214 pp. $14.95

Social Capital and Poor Communities


Susan Saegert, J. Phillip Thompson, and Mark R. Warren, editors

When Markets Fail: Social Policy and Economic Reform


Ethan B. Kapstein and Branko Milanovic, editors
978-0-87154-460-5 2002 cloth 248 pp. $34.95

A volume in the Ford Foundation Series on Asset Building


978-0-87154-734-7 2005 paper 352 pp. $23.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

FAX (800) 688-2877

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28

Selected Backlist

Worker Participation: lessons from the Worker Co-ops in the Pacific Northwest
John Pencavel
978-0-87154-656-2 2002 paper 128 pp. $12.95

Working and Poor: how Economic and Policy Changes are affecting low-Wage Workers
Rebecca M. Blank, Sheldon Danziger, and Robert F. Schoeni, editors

Democracy, Inequality, and Representation


a Comparative Perspective
Pablo Beramendi and Christopher J. anderson, editors

A volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-064-5 2008 paper 448 pp. $24.95

CASe StuDieS of Job equAlity in ADvAnCeD eConomieS


low-Wage america: how Employers are Reshaping Opportunity in the Workplace
Eileen appelbaum, annette Bernhardt, and Richard J. Murnane, editors
978-0-87154-026-3 2006 paper 456 pp. $22.50

An essential resource for experts on social policy, political economy, and electoral politics, as well as engaged readers simply wishing to understand why countries differ so much with regard to the priority placed on economic equality and security.Jacob S. Hacker, Yale University Simply the best summary of the current state of knowledge both about the impact of politics on economic inequality and of inequality on politics. Combining perspectives from economics sociology, and political science, Democracy, Inequality, and Representation is as rich in new insights as in new questions.Adam Przeworski, New York University
978-0-87154-324-0 2011 paper 448 pp. $35.00

low-Wage Work in Denmark


Niels Westergaard-Nielsen, editor
978-0-87154-896-2 2008 paper 320 pp. $9.95

SoCiAl inequAlity
Categorically Unequal: The american Stratification System
Douglas S. Massey
978-0-87154-584-8 2008 paper 338 pp. $17.95

low-Wage Work in France


ve Caroli and Jrme Gauti, editors
978-0-87154-070-6 2008 paper 328 pp. $9.95

low-Wage Work in Germany


Gerhard Bosch and Claudia Weinkopf, editors
978-0-87154-062-1 2008 paper 336 pp. $9.95

Economic Inequality and higher Education: access, Persistence, and Success


Stacy Dickert-Conlin and Ross Rubenstein, editors
978-0-87154-321-9 2009 paper 222 pp. $22.50

low-Wage Work in the Netherlands


Wiemer Salverda, Maarten van Klaveren, and Marc van der Meer, editors
978-0-87154-770-5 2008 paper 344 pp. $9.95

Imprisoning america: The Social Effects of Mass Incarceration


Mary Pattillo, David F. Weiman, and Bruce Western, editors
978-0-87154-654-8 2006 paper 288 pp. $19.95

low-Wage Work in the United Kingdom


Caroline lloyd, Geoff Mason, and Ken Mayhew, editors
978-0-87154-563-3 2008 paper 348 pp. $9.95

Inequality and american Democracy: What We Know and What We Need to learn
lawrence R. Jacobs and Theda Skocpol, editors
978-0-87154-414-8 2007 paper 256 pp. $19.95

low-Wage Work in the Wealthy World


Jrme Gauti and John Schmitt, editors
978-0-87154-061-4 2010 cloth 512 pp. $45.00

PHONE (800) 524-6401

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Selected Backlist
Just Schools: Pursuing Equality in Societies of Difference
Martha Minow, Richard a. Shweder, and hazel Rose Markus, editors
978-0-87154-582-4 2010 paper 312 pp. $23.95

29

eDuCAtion
achieving anew: how New Immigrants Do in american Schools, Jobs, and Neighborhoods
Michael J. White and Jennifer E. Glick

Making americans healthier: Social and Economic Policy as health Policy


Robert F. Schoeni, James S. house, George a. Kaplan, and harold Pollack, editors

Winner of the 2010 Otis Dudley Duncan Award


978-0-87154-926-6 2011 paper 6 x 9 236 pp. $29.95

A volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-748-4 2010 paper 446 pp. $27.50

after admission: From College access to College Success


James E. Rosenbaum, Regina Deil-amen, and ann E. Person
978-0-87154-755-2 2009 paper 280 pp. $22.50

Passing the Torch: Does higher Education for the Disadvantaged Pay Off across Generations?
Paul attewell and David E. lavin with Thurston Domina and Tania Levey

Beyond College for all: Career Paths for the Forgotten half
James E. Rosenbaum

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-038-6 2009 paper 228 pp. $17.95

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-753-8 2004 paper 336 pp. $16.95

Punishment and Inequality in america


Bruce Western
978-0-87154-895-5 2007 paper 264 pp. $17.95

Contesting Stereotypes and Creating Identities: Social Categories, Social Identities, and Educational Participation
andrew J. Fuligni, editor
978-0-87154-298-4 2007 cloth 288 pp. $42.50

Remaking america: Democracy and Public Policy in an age of Inequality


Joe Soss, Jacob S. hacker, and Suzanne Mettler, editors
978-0-87154-816-0 2010 paper 320 pp. $24.95

Social Class: how Does It Work?


annette lareau and Dalton Conley
978-0-87154-507-7 2010 paper 400 pp. $24.95

Passing the Torch


Does higher Education for the Disadvantaged Pay Off across the Generations?
Paul attewell and David E. lavin With Thurston Domina and Tania levey

Social Contracts Under Stress: The Middle Classes of america, Europe, and Japan at the Turn of the Century
Olivier zunz, leonard Schoppa, and Nobuhiro hiwatari, editors
978-0-87154-998-3 2004 paper 448 pp. $27.50

Winner of the 2009 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for the Best Book in Education
A landmark study, Passing the Torch vividly documents the critical role that open access continues to play in keeping the American dream alive for our least advantaged citizens. It is destined to take its place alongside Bowen and Boks The Shape of the River as one of the best books on the impact of higher education on opportunity in America. Jerome Karabel, University of California, Berkeley

Social Inequality
Kathryn M. Neckerman, editor
978-0-87154-621-0 2004 paper 1,024 pp. $49.95

Who Gets Represented?


Peter K. Enns and Christopher Wlezien, editors
978-0-87154-242-7 2011 paper 386 pp. $45.00

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-038-6 2009 paper 228 pp. $17.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

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30

Selected Backlist
The Market Comes to Education in Sweden: an Evaluation of Swedens Surprising School Reforms
anders Bjrklund, Melissa a. Clark, Per-anders Edin, Peter Fredriksson, and alan B. Krueger
978-0-87154-140-6 2005 cloth 280 pp. $27.50

Gendered Tradeoffs
Family, Social Policy, and Economic Inequality in Twenty-One Countries
Becky Pettit and Jennifer l. hook

The Money Myth: School Resources, Outcomes, and Equity


W. Norton Grubb
978-0-87154-043-0 2011 paper 416 pp. $24.95

Becky Pettit and Jennifer L. Hook have asked exactly the right questions, placing this book on the frontier of comparative research on women, work, and social policy. After a generation of researchers assessed the advantageous effects of work-family policies, comparative scholars are now focused on understanding and untangling the possibility of unintended consequencesespecially those that might worsen aspects of gender inequality in the labor market. Pettit and Hook conclude that some institutions that enable high levels of womens employment may, at the same time, reduce the relative quality of that employment.Janet Gornick, Graduate Center, CUNY
978-0-87154-695-1 2012 paper 6 x 9 254 pp. $27.50

The Promotion of Social awareness: Powerful lessons from the Partnership of Developmental Theory and Classroom Practice
Robert l. Selman
978-0-87154-756-9 2007 paper 344 pp. $24.95

The Social Organization of Schooling


larry V. hedges and Barbara Schneider, editors
978-0-87154-340-0 2005 cloth 384 pp. $49.95

Spin Cycle: how Research Is Used in Policy Debates: The Case of Charter Schools The Diversity Challenge: Social Identity and Intergroup Relations on the College Campus
Jim Sidanius, Shana levin, Colette van laar, and David O. Sears
978-0-87154-794-1 2010 paper 460 pp. $24.95

Jeffrey R. henig

Winner of the 2010 Outstanding Book Award of the American Educational Research Association Copublished with The Century Foundation
978-0-87154-337-0 2009 paper 312 pp. $23.95

Economic Inequality and higher Education: access, Persistence, and Success


Stacy Dickert-Conlin and Ross Rubenstein, editors
978-0-87154-321-9 2009 paper 222 pp. $22.50

Trust in Schools: a Core Resource for Improvement


anthony Bryk and Barbara Schneider

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-179-6 2004 paper 240 pp. $16.95

The Fifth Dimension: an after-School Program Built on Diversity


Michael Cole, The Distributed literacy Consortium Foreword by lucy Friedman, head of the after-School Corporation
978-0-87154-084-3 2006 cloth 248 pp. $29.95

fAmily WelfAre
Black Fathers in Contemporary american Society: Strengths, Weaknesses, and Strategies for Change
Obie Clayton, Ronald B. Mincy, and David Blankenhorn, editors
978-0-87154-158-1 2006 paper 200 pp. $15.95

Improving School-to-Work Transitions


David Neumark, editor
978-0-87154-642-5 2007 cloth 304 pp. $35.00

The Child Care Problem: an Economic analysis


David M. Blau
978-0-87154-101-7 2001 paper 304 pp. $17.50

Just Schools: Pursuing Equality in Societies of Difference


Martha Minow, Richard a. Shweder, and hazel Rose Markus, editors
978-0-87154-582-4 2010 paper 312 pp. $23.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

FAX (800) 688-2877

WEB www.russellsage.org

Selected Backlist
Changing Rhythms of american Family life
Suzanne M. Bianchi, John P. Robinson, and Melissa a. Milkie

31

Indicators of Childrens Well-Being


Robert M. hauser, Brett V. Brown, and William Prosser, editors
978-0-87154-386-8 1997 cloth 640 pp. $75.00

Winner of the ASAs 2007 Otis Dudley Duncan Award and the ASAs 2008 William J. Goode Award A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology
978-0-87154-093-5 2007 paper 272 pp. $17.95

Making It Work: low-Wage Employment, Family life, and Child Development


hirokazu yoshikawa, Thomas S. Weisner, and Edward D. lowe, editors
978-0-87154-973-0 2009 paper 448 pp. $19.95

Consequences of Growing Up Poor


Greg J. Duncan and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, editors
978-0-87154-144-4 1999 paper 672 pp. $24.95

Destinies of the Disadvantaged: The Politics of Teen Childbearing


Frank F. Furstenberg

Market Friendly or Family Friendly? The State and Gender Inequality in Old age
Madonna harrington Meyer and Pamela herd

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-646-3 2010 paper 248 pp. $23.95

Winner of the SRA Social Policy Award for Best Authored Book 20062008
978-0-87154-329-5 2010 paper 216 pp. $18.95

Neighborhood Poverty
Vol. I: Context and Consequences for Children Vol. II: Policy Implications in Studying Neighborhoods Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Greg J. Duncan, and J. lawrence aber, editors
Vol. I: 978-0-87154-188-8 2000 paper 356 pp. $16.95 Vol. II: 978-0-87154-189-5 2000 paper 264 pp. $13.95

Families That Work: Policies for Reconciling Parenthood and Employment


Janet C. Gornick and Marcia K. Meyers
978-0-87154-359-2 2005 paper 408 pp. $19.95

Fathers Under Fire: The Revolution in Child Support Enforcement


Irwin Garfinkel, Sara S. Mclanahan, Daniel R. Meyer, and Judith a. Seltzer, editors
978-0-87154-304-2 2001 paper 400 pp. $16.95

Poor Kids in a Rich Country: americas Children in Comparative Perspective


lee Rainwater and Timothy M. Smeeding
978-0-87154-705-7 2005 paper 280 pp. $19.95

Fighting for Time: Shifting Boundaries of Work and Social life


Cynthia Fuchs Epstein and arne l. Kalleberg, editors
978-0-87154-287-8 2006 paper 384 pp. $22.50

For Better and For Worse: Welfare Reform and the Well-Being of Children and Families
Greg J. Duncan and P. lindsay Chase-lansdale, editors
978-0-87154-263-2 2004 paper 344 pp. $19.95

Making the Work-Based Safety Net Work Better


Forward-looking Policies to help low-Income Families
Carolyn J. heinrich and John Karl Scholz, editors

The Future of the Family


Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Timothy M. Smeeding, and lee Rainwater, editors
978-0-87154-628-9 2006 paper 328 pp. $19.95

higher Ground: New hope for the Working Poor and Their Children
Greg J. Duncan, aletha C. huston, and Thomas S. Weisner

Winner of the Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics
978-0-87154-167-3 2008 paper 184 pp. $24.95

The first book by accomplished scholars based on the controversial assumption that encouraging and rewarding work is the foundation of the nations social policy for the poor. Given the prestige of the editors and authors, the quality of writing, and the originality of thought and proposals, anyone interested in the next generation of policies to help the poor should start with this seminal volume.Ron Haskins, The Brookings Institution
978-0-87154-422-3 2011 paper 6 x 9 360 pp. $32.50

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32

Selected Backlist
americas Newcomers and the Dynamics of Diversity
Frank D. Bean and Gillian Stevens

The Price of Independence: The Economics of Early adulthood


Sheldon Danziger and Cecilia Elena Rouse, editors
978-0-87154-316-5 2008 cloth 328 pp. $49.95

Winner of the 2002 Otis Dudley Duncan Award A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology
978-0-87154-128-4 2005 paper 328 pp. $19.95

Putting Children First: how low-Wage Working Mothers Manage Child Care
ajay Chaudry
978-0-87154-172-7 2006 paper 368 pp. $19.95

Becoming New yorkers: Ethnographies of the New Second Generation


Philip Kasinitz, John h. Mollenkopf, and Mary C. Waters, editors
978-0-87154-437-7 2006 paper 432 pp. $24.95

Reinsuring health: Why More Middle-Class People are Uninsured and What Government Can Do
Katherine Swartz
978-0-87154-788-0 2007 paper 224 pp. $15.95

Being and Belonging: Muslims in the United States Since 9/11


Katherine Pratt Ewing, editor
978-0-87154-044-7 2011 paper 224 pp. $24.95

Securing the Future: Investing in Children from Birth to College


Sheldon Danziger and Jane Waldfogel, editors
978-0-87154-280-9 2005 paper 352 pp. $24.95

Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Era of Economic Integration


Douglas S. Massey, Jorge Durand, and Nolan J. Malone
978-0-87154-590-9 2003 paper 216 pp. $15.95

Social awakening: adolescent Behavior as adulthood approaches


Robert T. Michael, editor
978-0-87154-616-6 2001 cloth 432 pp. $49.95

The Changing Face of home: The Transnational lives of the Second Generation
Peggy levitt and Mary C. Waters, editors
978-0-87154-516-9 2006 paper 424 pp. $24.95

Unmarried Couples with Children


Paula England and Kathryn Edin, editors
978-0-087154-317-2 2009 paper 312 pp. $23.95

Working in a 24/7 Economy: Challenges for american Families


harriet B. Presser
978-0-87154-671-5 2005 paper 288 pp. $16.95

Coethnicity
Diversity and Dilemmas of Collective action
James habyarimana, Macartan humphreys, Daniel N. Posner, and Jeremy M. Weinstein

immigrAtion AnD ethniC StuDieS


achieving anew: how New Immigrants Do in american Schools, Jobs, and Neighborhoods
Michael J. White and Jennifer E. Glick

Winner of the Gregroy Luebbert Book Award from the APSA


Good public policy demands that social scientists go beyond statistical correlations in order to understand the mechanisms that lead to market and government failure. [Habyarimana et al.] have brilliantly, persistently, and innovatively sorted out and identified the mechanisms that undermine the potential of ethnic diversity to enrich society through the gains from trade that ethnic complementarities should provide.David D. Laitin, Stanford University

Winner of the 2010 Otis Dudley Duncan Award


978-0-87154-926-6 2011 paper 6 x 9 236 pp. $29.95

A volume in the Russell Sage Foundation Series on Trust


978-0-87154-419-3 2011 paper 6 x 9 256 pp. $35.00

PHONE (800) 524-6401

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Selected Backlist
The Changing Terrain of Race and Ethnicity
Maria Krysan and amanda E. lewis, editors
978-0-87154-492-6 2006 paper 288 pp. $19.95

33

Inheriting the City


The Children of Immigrants Come of age
Philip Kasinitz, John h. Mollenkopf, Mary C. Waters, and Jennifer holdaway

Civic hopes and Political Realities: Immigrants, Community Organizations, and Political Engagement
S. Karthick Ramakrishnan and Irene Bloemraad, editors
978-0-87154-778-1 2011 paper 408 pp. $27.50

Color lines, Country lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth Stratification in america
lingxin hao
978-0-87154-319-6 2010 paper 328 pp. $24.95

Winner of the 2010 Distinguished Book Award from the American Sociological Association
In this benchmark study of the second generation, [the authors] report the results from their research on the second generation of the post-1965 immigration. . . . Drawing on their survey and on the face-to-face interviews, the authors analyze the second generation experienceincluding growing up in neighborhoods, getting an education, finding a job, starting a family, and participating in civil society to address the claims posed by segmented assimilation theorists. . . . They show that the second generation in the central city, often from humble origins, in fact has fared substantially better than their immigrant parents. For each of the groups they studied, the second generation not only has surpassed the formal schooling of their immigrant parents, but also that of young, antive-born minorities.American Journal of Sociology
978-0-87154-478-0 2009 paper 432 pp. $19.95

The Colors of Poverty: Why Racial and Ethnic Disparities Persist


ann Chih lin and David R. harris

A volume in the National Poverty Center Series on Poverty and Public Policy
978-0-87154-540-4 2010 paper 344 pp. $24.95

Crossing the Border: Research from the Mexican Migration Project


Jorge Durand and Douglas S. Massey, editors
978-0-87154-289-2 2006 paper 356 pp. $22.50

Ethnic los angeles Deflecting Immigration: Networks, Markets, and Regulation in los angeles
Ivan light
978-0-87154-537-4 2008 paper 272 pp. $21.95

Roger Waldinger and Mehdi Bozorgmehr, editors


978-0-87154-902-0 1996 paper 512 pp. $27.50

Ethnic Origins: The adaptation of Cambodian and hmong Refugees in Four american Cities
Jeremy hein

E Pluribus Unum? Contemporary and historical Perspectives on Immigrant Political Incorporation


Gary Gerstle and John Mollenkopf, editors
978-0-87154-307-3 2005 paper 448 pp. $23.95

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-336-3 2006 cloth 336 pp. $37.50

The Economic Sociology of Immigration: Essays on Networks, Ethnicity, and Entrepreneurship


alejandro Portes, editor
978-0-87154-681-4 1998 paper 320 pp. $19.95

Ethnic Solidarity for Economic Survival: Korean Greengrocers in New york City
Pyong Gap Min
978-0-87154-641-8 2011 paper 216 pp. $24.95

Encountering american Faultlines: Race, Class, and the Dominican Experience in Providence
Jos Itzigsohn

Generations of Exclusion: Mexican americans, assimilation, and Race


Edward E. Telles and Vilma Ortiz

Winner of the Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship and Research Award for a Book from the Latino/a Section of the ASA
978-0-87154-462-9 2011 paper 6 x 9 256 pp. $27.50

Winner of the 2009 Otis Dudley Duncan Award


978-0-87154-489-8 2009 paper 416 pp. $24.95

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34

Selected Backlist

Governing american Cities: Inter-Ethnic Coalitions, Competition, and Conflict


Michael Jones-Correa, editor
978-0-87154-417-9 2005 paper 272 pp. $19.95

Immigrants and Welfare


The Impact of Welfare Reform on americas Newcomers
Michael Fix, editor

Growing Up american: how Vietnamese Children adapt to life in the United States
Min zhou and Carl l. Bankston III
978-0-87154-995-2 1999 paper 288 pp. $16.95

The handbook of International Migration: The american Experience


Charles hirschman, Josh DeWind, and Philip Kasinitz, editors
978-0-87154-244-1 1999 cloth 508 pp. $65.00

Immigrants and Boomers: Forging a New Social Contract for the Future of america
Dowell Myers
978-0-87154-624-1 2008 paper 384 pp. $17.95

In this incisive volume, Michael Fix and his colleagues give us the most comprehensive compilation of the evidence on immigrants use of public benefits before and after welfare reform. It both challenges some of the popular misconceptions about immigrants costs to the polity that fueled a backlash against newcomers to the country in the welfare and immigration law changes of the 1990s, and vigorously informs us about the impacts of those changes for immigrants and their children. . . . As the nation prepares in the coming year to debate comprehensive immigration reform, we can only hope that our leaders take these facts into account and lead us to where the evidence and our values suggest is a better place.Ajay Chaudry, The Urban Institute

Copublished with the Migration Policy Institute

Immigration and Opportunity: Race, Ethnicity, and Employment in the United States
Frank D. Bean and Stephanie Bell-Rose, editors
978-0-87154-151-2 2003 paper 412 pp. $24.95

978-0-87154-467-4 2011 paper 244 pp. $29.95

Immigration Research for a New Century: Multidisciplinary Perspectives


Nancy Foner, Rubn G. Rumbaut, and Steven J. Gold, editors
978-0-87154-261-8 2003 paper 512 pp. $24.95

New Destinations: Mexican Immigration in the United States


Vctor ziga and Rubn hernndez-len, editors
978-0-87154-989-1 2006 paper 320 pp. $21.95

Italians Then, Mexicans Now: Immigrant Origins and Second-Generation Progress, 1890 to 2000
Joel Perlmann

New Faces in New Places: The Changing Geography of american Immigration


Douglas S. Massey, editor
978-0-87154-568-6 2010 paper 384 pp. $42.50

Copublished with the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College


978-0-87154-664-7 2007 paper 208 pp. $15.95

The New Second Generation


alejandro Portes, editor
978-0-87154-684-5 1996 paper 316 pp. $21.95

l.a. Story: Immigrant Workers and the Future of the U.S. labor Movement
Ruth Milkman
978-0-87154-635-7 2006 paper 264 pp. $24.95

Not Just Black and White: historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Immigration, Race, and Ethnicity in the United States
Nancy Foner and George M. Fredrickson, editors
978-0-87154-270-0 2005 paper 408 pp. $24.95

lone Pursuit: Distrust and Defensive Individualism among the Black Poor
Sandra Susan Smith
978-0-87154-774-3 2010 paper 264 pp. $24.95

Overcoming apartheid: Can Truth Reconcile a Divided Nation?


James l. Gibson
978-0-87154-313-4 2006 paper 488 pp. $22.50

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Selected Backlist
Pious Property: Islamic Mortgages in the United States
Bill Maurer
978-0-87154-581-7 2006 cloth 144 pp. $24.95

35

behAviorAl eConomiCS
advances in Behavioral Finance
Richard h. Thaler, editor
978-0-87154-844-3 1993 paper 598 pp. $21.95

Problem of the Century: Racial Stratification in the United States


Elijah anderson and Douglas S. Massey, editors
978-0-87154-055-3 2004 paper 480 pp. $18.95

asking about Prices: a New approach to Understanding Price Stickiness


alan S. Blinder, Elie R. D. Canetti, David E. lebow, and Jeremy B. Rudd
978-0-87154-121-5 1998 cloth 336 pp. $34.95

To Be an Immigrant
Kay Deaux
978-0-87154-085-0 2009 paper 272 pp. $21.95

Behavioral Public Finance West Indian Immigrants: a Black Success Story?


Suzanne Model
978-0-87154-675-3 2011 paper 408 pp. $24.95

Edward J. McCaffery and Joel Slemrod, editors


978-0-87154-597-8 2006 cloth 416 pp. $45.00

Networks and Markets Wont you Be My Neighbor? Race, Class, and Residence in los angeles
Camille zubrinsky Charles
978-0-87154-071-3 2002 paper 128 pp. $18.95

James E. Rauch and alessandra Casella, editors


978-0-87154-700-2 2001 cloth 360 pp. $39.95

The New Economic Sociology: Developments in an Emerging Field


Mauro F. Guilln, Randall Collins, Paula England, and Marshall Meyer, editors
978-0-87154-365-3 2005 paper 392 pp. $22.50

the SCienCe of SoCiAl SCienCe


after Parsons: a Theory of Social action for the Twenty-First Century
Rene C. Fox, Victor M. lidz, and harold J. Bershady, editors
978-0-87154-269-4 2005 cloth 368 pp. $59.95

Big Structures, large Processes, huge Comparisons


Charles Tilly
978-0-87154-880-1 1989 paper 192 pp. $11.95

Street-level Bureaucracy
Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services: 30th Anniversary Edition
Michael lipsky

The handbook of Research Synthesis and Meta-analysis: Second Edition


harris Cooper, larry V. hedges, and Jeffrey C. Valentine, editors
978-0-87154-163-5 2009 cloth 632 pp. $69.95

Social Science for What? Philanthropy and the Social Question in a World Turned Rightside Up
alice OConnor
978-0-87154-649-4 2007 cloth 192 pp. $22.50

Provocative, well written, and full of marvelous insights into the service patterns and practices of human services organizations. . . . A major contribution. Social Science Review Highly illuminating. . . . Provides valuable information on the interface between the street-level human service bureaucrats and their clients. Social Policy One of the most imoprtant recent books on urban affairs and administration.Choice
978-0-87154-544-2 2010 paper 300 pp. $18.95

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36

Selected Backlist

Quasi Rational Economics


Richard h. Thaler
978-0-87154-847-4 1994 paper 360 pp. $21.95

Still Connected
Family and Friends in America Since 1970
Claude S. Fischer

The Sociology of the Economy


Frank Dobbin, editor
978-0-87154-284-7 2004 cloth 360 pp. $49.95

Time and Decision: Economic and Psychological Perspectives on Intertemporal Choice


George loewenstein, Daniel Read, and Roy F. Baumeister, editors
978-0-87154-549-7 2003 cloth 584 pp. $49.95

SoCiAl PSyChology
american Memories: atrocities and the law
Joachim J. Savelsberg and Ryan D. King

Winner of the 2012 SSSP Social Problems Theory Section Outstanding Book Award A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology
978-0-87154-736-1 2011 cloth 6 x 9 264 pp. $37.50

No one knows more about Americans social networks than Claude Fischer. His spare and elegant prose cuts through hype about the decline of social ties and presents a definitive and brilliantly nuanced account of our persisting yet subtly changing connections to others. Mark Granovetter, Stanford University Claude Fischer has done us all a valuable service in providing this careful and judicious examination of the data on friendship patterns and social contacts since the 1970s. Once again, it seems, journalists have mostly gotten it wrong in being too eager to identify dramatic trends and relying too readily on shoddy polls. Sometimes the news is that things have actually stayed pretty much the same, even when greater change might have been expected.Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University
978-0-87154-332-5 2011 paper 164 pp. $24.95

Contesting Stereotypes and Creating Identities: Social Categories, Social Identities, and Educational Participation
andrew J. Fuligni, editor
978-0-87154-298-4 2007 cloth 288 pp. $42.50

Navigating the Future: Social Identity, Coping, and life Tasks


Geraldine Downey, Jacquelynne S. Eccles, and Celina M. Chatman, editors
978-0-87154-282-3 2005 cloth 272 pp. $42.50

Cultural Divides: Understanding and Overcoming Group Conflict


Deborah a. Prentice and Dale T. Miller, editors
978-0-87154-689-0 2001 paper 524 pp. $18.50

Social Commitments in a Depersonalized World


Edward J. lawler, Shane R. Thye, and Jeongkoo yoon

Winner of the 2010 Best Book Award from the ASAs Rationality and Society Section
978-0-87154-508-4 2011 paper 264 pp. $23.95

Culture and Resource Conflict: Why Meanings Matter


Douglas l. Medin, Norbert O. Ross, and Douglas G. Cox
978-0-87154-570-1 2006 cloth 248 pp. $32.50

Well-Being: The Foundations of hedonic Psychology


Daniel Kahneman, Ed Diener, and Norbert Schwarz, editors
978-0-87154-423-0 2003 paper 608 pp. $35.00

Do Emotions help or hurt Decision Making? a hedgefoxian Perspective


Kathleen D. Vohs, Roy F. Baumeister, and George loewenstein, editors
978-0-87154-877-1 2007 cloth 368 pp. $47.50

truSt SerieS
Cooperation Without Trust?
Karen S. Cook, Russell hardin, and Margaret levi
978-0-87154-165-9 2007 paper 272 pp. $21.95

Engaging Cultural Differences: The Multicultural Challenge in liberal Democracies


Richard a. Shweder, Martha Minow, and hazel Rose Markus, editors
978-0-87154-795-8 2004 paper 504 pp. $22.95

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Selected Backlist
Democracy and the Culture of Skepticism: Political Trust in argentina and Mexico
Matthew R. Cleary and Susan C. Stokes
978-0-87154-065-2 2009 paper 344 pp $24.95

37

Trust in Society
Karen S. Cook, editor
978-0-87154-181-9 2003 paper 432 pp. $24.95

Distrust
Russell hardin, editor
978-0-87154-364-6 2009 paper 344 pp. $22.50

Trust in the law: Encouraging Public Cooperation with the Police and Courts
Tom R. Tyler and yuen J. huo
978-0-87154-889-4 2002 cloth 264 pp. $32.95

eTrust: Forming Relationships in the Online World


Karen S. Cook, Chris Snijders, Vincent Buskens, and Coye Cheshire, editors
978-0-87154-311-0 2009 cloth 272 pp $55.00

inStitutionAl AnAlySiS
The Company Doctor: Risk, Responsibility, and Corporate Professionalism
Elaine Draper
978-0-87154-290-8 2005 paper 416 pp. $29.95

Evolution and the Capacity for Commitment


Randolph M. Nesse
978-0-87154-622-7 2001 cloth 352 pp. $42.50

Designing Democratic Government: Making Institutions Work Streetwise: how Taxi Drivers Establish Their Customers Trustworthiness
Diego Gambetta and heather hamill
978-0-87154-309-7 2005 paper 264 pp. $19.95

Margaret levi, James Johnson, Jack Knight, and Susan Stokes, editors
978-0-87154-459-9 2011 paper 336 pp. $32.95

Teaching, Tasks, and Trust: Functions of the Public Executive


John Brehm and Scott Gates
978-0-87154-717-1 2011 paper 184 pp. $24.95

Trust and Distrust in Organizations: Dilemmas and approaches


Roderick M. Kramer and Karen S. Cook, editors
978-0-87154-486-5 2007 paper 400 pp. $24.95

Whom Can We Trust?


how Groups, Networks, and Institutions Make Trust Possible
Karen S. Cook, Margaret levi, and Russell hardin, editors

Trust and Governance


Valerie Braithwaite and Margaret levi, editors
978-0-87154-135-2 2003 paper 400 pp. $24.95

Trust and Reciprocity: Interdisciplinary lessons for Experimental Research


Elinor Ostrom and James Walker, editors
978-0-87154-648-7 2005 paper 424 pp. $24.95

Trust and Trustworthiness


Russell hardin
978-0-87154-341-7 2004 paper 256 pp. $19.95

This collection of essays from diverse scholars will become a standard reference book for those interested in the conditions generating trust and the effects of trust in interpersonal relations, groups, networks, organizations, and institutional systems. Taken together, the essays provide new explanatory insights on the properties and dynamics of trust at the micro, meso, and macro levels of social reality. Theoretical insights are illustrated with data collected by a range of methodologies and a wide range of settings. A book that will appeal to researchers and theorists within academia, but equally significant, a book that will prove useful to policy makers and applies social scientists. Jonathan H. Turner, University of California, Riverside

A volume in the Russell Sage Foundation Series on Trust


978-0-87154-315-8 2009 cloth 360 pp. $55.00

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38

Selected Backlist
leaving Science: Occupational Exit from Scientific Careers
anne E. Preston
978-0-87154-694-4 2004 cloth 224 pp. $37.50

Disease Prevention as Social Change: The State, Society, and Public health in the United States, France, Great Britain, and Canada
Constance Nathanson
978-0-87154-645-6 2009 paper 344 pp. $19.95

legitimacy and Criminal Justice: International Perspectives


anthony Braga, Jeffrey Fagan, Tracey Meares, Robert Sampson, Tom R. Tyler, and Chris Winship, editors
978-0-87154-876-4 2007 cloth 408 pp. $49.95

Evangelicals and Democracy in america


Vol. I: Religion and Society Vol. II: Religion and Politics Steven Brint and Jean Reith Schroedel , editors
978-0-87154-011-9 2011 paper 384 pp. $29.95 978-0-87154-012-6 2011 paper 384 pp. $29.95

The legitimacy of Philanthropic Foundations: United States and European Perspectives


Kenneth Prewitt, Mattei Dogan, Steven heydemann, and Stefan Toepler, editors
978-0-87154-696-8 2006 cloth 312 pp. $45.00

Fringe Banking: Check-Cashing Outlets, Pawnshops, and the Poor


John P. Caskey
978-0-87154-180-2 1996 paper 192 pp. $16.95

The limits of Market Organization


Richard R. Nelson, editor
978-0-87154-626-5 2005 cloth 400 pp. $45.00

The Future of the Voting Rights act


David l. Epstein, Richard h. Pildes, Rodolfo O. de la Garza, and Sharyn Ohalloran, editors
978-0-87154-072-0 2006 paper 392 pp. $35.00

local Justice
Jon Elster
978-0-87154-232-8 1993 paper 288 pp. $16.95

learning More from Social Experiments: Evolving analytic approaches


howard S. Bloom, editor
978-0-87154-133-8 2006 paper 264 pp. $19.95

looking at lives: american longitudinal Studies of the Twentieth Century


Erin Phelps, Frank F. Furstenberg, and anne Colby, editors
978-0-87154-660-9 2002 cloth 424 pp. $47.50

Social Movements in the World-System


The Politics of Crisis and Transformation
Jackie Smith and Dawn Wiest

Making hate a Crime: From Social Movement to law Enforcement


Valerie Jenness and Ryken Grattet

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-410-0 2004 paper 238 pp. $16.95

The Missing links: Formation and Decay of Economic Networks


James E. Rauch, editor
978-0-87154-709-5 2007 cloth 256 pp. $35.00

A much-needed and very comprehensive analytic integration of the realities of worldwide social movements and their theorization. Social Movements in the World-System permits us to appreciate and integrate the new spectacular occupy movements as something with deep roots in what has happened over the past fifty years.Immanuel Wallerstein, Yale University

Preferences and Situations: Points of Intersection Between historical and Rational Choice Institutionalism
Ira Katznelson and Barry R. Weingast, editors
978-0-87154-442-1 2007 paper 352 pp. $24.95

A volume in the American Sociological Associations Rose Series in Sociology


978-0-87154-812-2 2012 paper 252 pp. $39.95

Risk Taking: a Managerial Perspective


zur Shapira
978-0-87154-767-5 1997 paper 160 pp. $18.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

FAX (800) 688-2877

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Selected Backlist
Social Norms
Michael hechter and Karl-Dieter Opp, editors
978-0-87154-355-4 2005 paper 456 pp. $24.95

39

9/11 ProJeCt
Citizenship and Crisis: Arab Detroit After 9/11
Detroit arab american Study Team
978-0-87154-052-2 2009 cloth 312 pp. $42.50

Welfare Reform and Political Theory


lawrence M. Mead and Christopher Beem, editors
978-0-87154-588-6 2007 paper 296 pp. $21.95

The Consequences of Counterterrorism


Martha Crenshaw, editor
978-0-87154-073-7 2010 cloth 432 pp. $49.95

CenSuS reSeArCh SerieS


The American People: Census 2000
Reynolds Farley and John haaga, editors
978-0-87154-273-1 2005 paper 470 pp. $35.00

Contentious City: The Politics of Recovery in New york City


John Mollenkopf, editor
978-0-87154-630-2 2005 paper 248 pp. $24.95

Century of Difference: how america Changed in the last One hundred years
Claude S. Fischer and Michael hout

homeland Insecurity: The arab american and Muslim American Experience After 9/11
louise a. Cainkar
978-0-87154-053-9 2011 paper 338 pp. $23.95

Winner of the Otis Dudley Duncan Award for Outstanding Scholarship


978-0-87154-368-4 2008 paper 424 pp. $24.95

Muslims in the United States: The State of Research


Karen Isaksen leonard
978-0-87154-530-5 2003 paper 216 pp. $17.95

The hard Count: The Political and Social Challenges of Census Mobilization
D. Sunshine hillygus, Norman h. Nie, Kenneth Prewitt, and heili Pals
978-0-87154-335-6 2009 paper 168 pp. $17.95

Negative liberty: Public Opinion and the Terrorist attacks on america


Darren W. Davis
978-0-87154-323-3 2009 paper 296 pp. $22.50

The New Race Question: how the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals
Joel Perlmann and Mary C. Waters, editors

Copublished with the Levy Economics Institute


978-0-87154-658-6 2005 paper 416 pp. $22.50

Resilient City: The Economic Impact of 9/11


howard Chernick, editor
978-0-87154-170-3 2005 paper 352 pp. $24.95

One Nation Divisible: What america Was and What It Is Becoming


Michael B. Katz and Mark J. Stern
978-0-87154-446-9 2008 paper 368 pp. $24.95

Security v. liberty: Conflicts Between Civil liberties and National Security in american history
Daniel Farber, editor
978-0-87154-327-1 2008 cloth 256 pp. $32.50

Who Counts? The Politics of Census-Taking in Contemporary america


Margo J. anderson and Stephen E. Fienberg
978-0-87154-257-1 2001 paper 400 pp. $16.95

Wounded City: The Social Impact of 9/11


Nancy Foner, editor
978-0-87154-271-7 2005 paper 392 pp. $24.95

PHONE (800) 524-6401

FAX (800) 688-2877

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The American Non-Dilemma (pb), DiTomaso. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Asian American Political Participation (pb), Wong et al. . . . . . . . Biological Consequences of Socioecon. Inequalities (pb), Wolfe et al. Britains War on Poverty (pb), Waldfogel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Broken Table (pb), Rhomberg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brokered Boundaries (pb), Massey/Snchez . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Changing Face of World Cities (pb) Crul/Mollenkopf . . . . . Coming of Political Age (pb), Callahan/Muller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coping with Crisis (pb), Bermeo/Pontusson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Counted Out (pb), Powell et al. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dialogue Across Difference (pb), Gurin, et al. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Diversity Paradox (pb), Lee/Bean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Documenting Desegregation (pb), Stainback/Tomaskovic-Devey Epidemic City (pb), Colgrove . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Facing Social Class (pb), Fiske/Markus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Family Consequences of Childrens Disabilities (pb), Hogan . . . . . For Love and Money (pb), Folbre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . From Parents to Children (pb), Ermisch/Jntti/Smeeding. . . . . . Good Jobs America (pb), Osterman/Shulman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Good Jobs, Bad Jobs (pb), Kalleberg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Great Recession (pb), Grusky/Western/Wimer . . . . . . . . . . . Immigrants Raising Citizens (pb), Yoshikawa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Insufficient Funds (pb), Blank/Barr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Invisible Men (pb), Pettit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Just Neighbors? (pb) Telles/Sawyer/Rivera-Salgado . . . . . . . . . . . Keeping the Immigrant Bargain (pb), Louie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nashville in the New Millenium (pb), Winders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nurturing Dads (pb), Marsiglio/Roy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Old Assumptions, New Realities (pb), Plotnick, et al.. . . . . . . . . . Persistence, Privilege, & Parenting (pb), Smeeding/Erikson/Jntti. Reaching for a New Deal (pb), Skocpol/Jacobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rethinking the Financial Crisis (pb), Blinder/Lo/Solow. . . . . . . . Rethinking Workplace Regulation (pb), Stone/Arthurs . . . . . . . . . The Rise of Women (pb), DiPrete/Buchmann . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shattering Culture (pb), Good et al. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Steady Gains and Stalled Progress (pb), Magnuson/Waldfogel . . Tiny Publics (pb), Fine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Where Are All the Good Jobs Going? (pb), Holzer et al. . . . . . . . . Whither Opportunity? (pb), Duncan/Murnane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Whose Rights? (pb), Brooks/Manza . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________

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Individuals All orders must be prepaid. See order form for shipping and handling information, and send orders to: RSF Publications Office, 112 E. 64th St., NY, NY 10065. Retail, library, Wholesale Orders All orders, returns, and customer service issues are handled through Russell Sage Foundations distributor, CUP Services. Retail and library accounts earn a 20 percent discount. Booksellers belonging to the Russell Sage Foundation Agency Plan are eligible for a special discount. Contact your sales representative or write to us in New York for participation information. Wholesalers may contact our New York office for ordering information. Russell Sage Foundation/CUP Services 750 Cascadilla Street, PO Box 6525 Ithaca, NY 14851 Fed. ID# 15-0532082 Tel: (800) 666-2211 Fax: (800) 688-2877 Tel: (607) 277-2211 Fax: (607) 277-6292 In the U.K., Europe, and Israel, Send Orders to NBN International, Airport Business Centre 10 Thornbury Road, Plymouth PL67PP, U.K. Tel: +44(0)1752 202301 Fax: +44(0)1752 202333 Examination Copies Instructors who wish to consider Russell Sage Foundation books for course use should send their requests on departmental letterhead, stating course name, estimated enrollment, and course date. Exam copy requests must be accompanied by payment (check, money order, or credit card information) and are available at a 20 percent discount. A full refund will be issued if notification is received within sixty days that twenty or more copies have been ordered as a required text for classroom use or if the examination copy is returned in good condition. Instructors may request one desk copy for every twenty copies ordered. Complimentary Copy Requests For review and catalog requests, as well as general information about Russell Sage Foundation publications, please contact our New York office. Returns Permission to return books is not required. Returns should be sent to CUP Services and will be accepted as long as a book is in print and in saleable condition. Full credit will be granted if the invoice number, date, and original discount are supplied.

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West Coast Nancy Suib & Associates Nancy Suib 4114 Lyman Road, Oakland, CA 94602 Tel: (510) 482-2303 Fax: (510) 482-8573 Email: nsuib@earthlink.net CA, OR, AK Vicki Davies 845 Stoker Avenue, Reno, NV 89503 Tel: (775) 787-5903 Fax: (866) 353-9475 Email: vldavies25@gmail.com CO, No. NV, UT, NM, AZ, WA, ID, MT, WY New England and Mid-atlantic Ben Schrager 735 Pelham Parkway N., Bronx, NY 10467 Tel/Fax: (718) 654-1968 U.K., Europe, and Israel University Presses Marketing The Tobacco Factory, Raleigh Road Southville, Bristol BS3 1TF, UK Tel: +44 0117 9020275 Fax: +44 0117 9020294 all Other areas Send orders to CUP Services

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