The Face of Discrimination

How Race and Gender Impact Work and Home Lives

Vincent J Roscigno author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield

Published:18th May '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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The Face of Discrimination cover

Thousands of individuals are discriminated against each year due to their race or sex, even 40 years after the Civil Rights Act. The Face of Discrimination documents the forms, character, and implications of race and sex discrimination at work and in housing, drawing from archived discrimination suits themselves. Going beyond traditional social science research on the topic, this book grounds the reader in the reality of discrimination as it is played out in the actual jobs, neighborhoods, and lives of real people. The systematic approach taken by Roscigno and his team of collaborators, in concert with the qualitative material used throughout, sheds significant light on an important, and contributes specifically to the understanding of employer biases, sexual harassment, structural inequalities in where workers are placed occupationally, why housing segregation persists, and how discrimination in housing and work take a toll on individuals in their daily lives.

This is a meticulously researched, theoretically compelling, and deeply disturbing account of how sex and race discrimination operate in the everyday lives of people. Based on case data from individuals who filed formal complaints with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission, The Face of Discrimination is a must read for students and scholars interested in understanding the interactional processes that produce and sustain gender and racial inequality. -- Verta Taylor, Professor, University of California at Santa Barbara
The book is written academically but is generally accessible to others; the message is important and well articulated....Recommended. * CHOICE, April 2008 *
The data alone makes this an important study, but the analyses convincingly illustrate how real people do what needs to be done to create white and male privilege, showing us how social closure processes actually work in employment and housing. Roscigno demonstrates that interactional discrimination has far reaching consequences for reproducing racial and gender inequality in today's world. This book should be required reading not only in social science classes, but in every MBA program in the country. -- Barbara Risman, University of Illinois at Chicago, executive officer of the Council on Contemporary Families

ISBN: 9780742548077

Dimensions: 237mm x 165mm x 25mm

Weight: 513g

256 pages