Chutes and Ladders: Navigating the Low-Wage Labor Market (Russell Sage Foundation Books)
by Katherine S. Newman
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other reviews (showing 1-18 of 18)
Read in March, 2007
This may be a bit too academic for most readers, but if you are interested in getting behind the headlines about poverty and the income polarization in the U.S., Katherine Newman has written an absorbing (and somewhat technical) ethnographic exploration poverty and low-wage earners. She follows 10 key figures starting with their first fast-food/low wage jobs and through their hardships, challenges and some successes -- in America's inner-city neighborhoods and projects. I liked the substance -...more
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bookshelves:
intellectually-interesting
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
sociologists
If you've read No Shame in My Game, this book details the not-quite-ten-year (not as well-funded) follow-up study, and I found it interesting to see how the lives of former Harlem fast-food workers had evolved. Some had done quite well, which was surprising and uplifting. If you've not read No Shame in My Game skip Chutes and Ladders and read the former, instead. Although this latest piece is interesting, it doesn't make the contributions to sociological theory that the f...more
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bookshelves:
america,
cities,
class,
nyc
Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
academics
this book's subject matter is interesting, but it's too much of an ethnographical study to be a good read.
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Read in April, 2008
Really great case studies that personalize the issues of the working-poor.
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