Social Sciences: The Big Issues second edition offers an introduction to the big debates within the social sciences and to what the social sciences can provide as a means of explaining the changing world. The social sciences focus upon people as individuals and as members of wider communities and networks, and look at all aspects of human relationships from the personal and intimate to the public and political. The book covers contemporary concerns with identities, citizenship, migration, diversity, new technologies, and the changing and often uncertain impact of globalization. The second edition has been extensively updated with new illustrations and examples, and additional discussion of the responses of the social sciences to the mobilities of contemporary life, such as migration, living in multiethnic and often rapidly changing communities, new forms of citizenship, the impact of the material world, the perception that we live in a more insecure and dangerous world and the role of the media in presenting ideas about the changes that might be taking place.
I read this for my Level 1 OU course DD101 and found that it helped a lot with my understanding of various social science topics and debates. The book gives introductions on Identity, Citizenship & Social Order, Buying and Selling, Consumerism, Mobilities and Race, and Globalization. Within those topics, it gives examples of economics, migration, racism, political policies etc. Each chapter has various summaries throughout which makes the book very accessible for beginners to these subjects. At the back is a general conclusion on the topics discussed, as well as a glossary and further reading recs.
This doesn't really achieve its purpose and that's basically the author's fault. While some interesting topics are covered (alas mostly later in the book so many will have long given up before reaching them and they are generally covered with an annoying slant), the writing is extremely turgid, not the sort of engaging introduction to new subject matter which runs the outside risk of enthusing the odd new student.
The preoccupation with race and gender becomes tiresome, in the sense that there is very little insight offered beyond race and gender impacting almost every issue which arises. She could have saved a lot of tedium by beginning the book with a very short chapter, saying race and gender impact all the following issues. It's a very long time since I've read a book where I thought I really don't want to meet the author as often as I did with this one. Maybe the one about the drunks getting involved in a shootout on the tram system in Portland. Alluding to the Siege of Gresham makes this review far more exciting than the book deserves. I'm very glad to have reached the end of it and if I don't parlay some extra marks (with boring quotes or ideas) from it for future essays I'll have wasted plenty of time. This was so difficult to focus on I spent over four and a half minutes per page.
This is a useful and engaging introductory text looking at what the social sciences can tell us about the big social issues. It is clear and forceful without being tendentious, and seems to be aimed at beginning social science students. The clear outlines of major theoretical traditions in specific settings and applied to specific issues means it should be useful more generally: I'll be using it in a final year undergraduate course to provide a tool to encourage sport science students to think more broadly about the social science work. What is more, in its emphasis on consumption and material culture it resonates with some of the key issues in sociologies of sport and leisure.
Accessible and insightful, I'm sure it will also unsettle my students (which is exactly what we want to have happen).