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Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Class: The Sociology of Group Conflict and Change

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SAGE & Pine Forge Press congratulate esteemed author Joseph F. Healey for winning the 2007 “Texty” Textbook Excellence Award from the Text and Academic Authors Association for his textbook Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Class, 4th Edition!

The text that has been very popular among undergraduate students studying race and ethnicity has been updated and revised in this new Fourth Edition! Written in a clear, consistent style, this best-selling text eloquently describes and, at times, serves as a conduit for a broad spectrum of experiences related to race, ethnicity, gender, and class. Author Joseph F. Healey uses sociological theory to tell the story of race and other socially constructed inequalities in the United States with consistency and clarity. 

Key Features and Updates to the Fourth Edition: 

All new 2-Color scheme All new Chapter 11, "New Americans: Immigration and Assimilation" All new Public Sociology Assignments within each PART All new "Photo Essays" within most of the chapters that visually reinforce key concepts in a dramatic and memorable fashion Provides "Current Debates" at the end of chapters on important issues, expressed through the ideas and writings of prominent scholars Includes "Narrative Portraits" -- first person accounts -- that are threaded throughout the text Updated Exhibits with 2002 census information

 

593 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 4, 1998

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Joseph F. Healey

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Christy Hammer.
113 reviews302 followers
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February 16, 2017
Seems like issues like these are getting more complicated, more scrutiny, and more "back to basics" study just to have some common language to discuss what we think we know about these human relations in context. I've assigned Healey, along with some primary source readings, for a few years now as he does a remarkable job synthesizing the history and nature of both group and individual identity and differences. As typical of the "race and ethnic relations" field, and to separate sociology (too much) from anthropology, the content is US/West-centric but has a decent number of global connections including US immigration issues in the context of global migration. (I think the field is starting to get global, finally, as the first so-titled book on "global racism" has just come out: Race and Power: Global Racism in the Twenty First Century). I predict "global racism" as a growth industry.

I know this is a textbook. Sorry about that. However, it's cheap and is basically "cliff notes" from several hundreds of books pulling from across social and behavioral sciences on...you got it...."race, ethnicity, gender, and class"! Get it if you need it.
Profile Image for Mildred.
344 reviews6 followers
May 1, 2021
Having spent a semester with this book I'm very satisfied with it. Is it perfect? No. Nothing covering these subjects ever could be. This book has given me a solid foundation on which to become a better person.
1 review
March 6, 2019
For a textbook this material is filled with biased opinions from the authors. They present theories as facts and push their personal agendas onto the reader. Very disappointing book.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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