
Looking Upstream to Explain Social Harm
Description
This book critically examines the complex relationships between inequality, democratic forms, and social harm, asking what successful countries have in common - and why others struggle. It explores how in recent years, research into the causes of social problems has urged us to consider the broader political, economic, and social forces at play. Many policymakers, however, continue to focus on short-term solutions or demand greater personal responsibility from their citizens while downplaying the role of upstream factors like inequality and democracy. This book offers a fresh and methodologically innovative analysis of how inequality, governance styles, and other factors such as globalisation, social protection, and national income intersect to shape societies. Contributing to the fields of inequality, political sociology, and comparative social research, this volume also provides a powerful pedagogical tool by demonstrating how to replicate and extend existing empirical studies in a more complex contemporary landscape.
More details
Person
Ian Greener is Professor of Sociology and Social Policy and Head of Sociological and Cultural Studies at the University of Glasgow, UK.
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: A framework for exploring the inequality, democracy and social harm.- Chapter 3 - What factors led to higher levels of social harm in the 2000s?.- Chapter 4: What factors led to lower levels of social harm in the 2000s?.- Chapter 5: Updating the debate - Inequality, democracy and social harm in 2019.- Chapter 6: What about today? Inequality, democracy and social harm after the pandemic.- Chapter 7: Conclusion. What is the relationship between the book's causal factors and social harm?.