Societal Problems as Public Bads

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A01=Dingeman Wiertz
A01=Nan de Graaf
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Author_Dingeman Wiertz
Author_Nan de Graaf
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Category=GPS
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Category=JFS
Category=JHB
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Category=JKV
Category=JMA
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Category=JPA
Category=KC
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Checkers Board
Climate Deal
cognitive dissonance
collective action problems
Common Pool Resources
COP=United Kingdom
corruption
CPI Score
Criminal Entrepreneurs
criminal markets
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Demographic Transition Model
discrimination
economic inequality
environmental degradation
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnic conflict
extremism
Female Labour Force Participation
fertility and mortality rates
financial crisis
financial markets
gender discrimination
Gender Egalitarian Norms
Gender Pay Differences
Global Common Pool Resource
Global Income Distribution
Global Income Inequality
global warming
government policy
Great Crash
Great Gatsby Curve
Human Development Index
industrial capitalism
inequality
interdisciplinary social studies
interventionist state
Language_English
Lorenz Curve
macro-micro-macro model
migration
Mortgage Backed Securities
mortgage market
mulicultural society
Negative Relationship
OECD Social Expenditure Database
organised crime
PA=Available
political ideologies
population growth
Price_€20 to €50
principal-agent model
PS=Active
public agenda
public bads
public policy analysis
Public Social Spending
rational choice models
religious fundamentalism
secularization
social mechanism research
social mechanisms
social science theory
societal problems
softlaunch
Stem Degree
transformation mechanisms
Tulip Bulbs
Tulip Mania
unintended consequences in society
Vice Versa
welfare state
Welfare State Retrenchment
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138480216
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 20 May 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Corruption, crime, economic inequality, religious fundamentalism, financial crises, environmental degradation, population ageing, gender inequality, large-scale migration… This book tackles many of the most pressing problems facing societies today. The authors demonstrate that similar social mechanisms lie behind many of these seemingly disparate problems. Indeed, many societal problems can be traced back to behaviours that are perfectly rational and often well-intended from an individual perspective. Yet, taken together these behaviours can – paradoxically – give rise to unintended and undesirable outcomes at the society level.

In addition to addressing the causes of societal problems, the book explains why some problems rank higher on the public agenda than others. Moreover, it is shown how government intervention may sometimes provide a cure, yet other times exacerbate existing problems or create new problems of its own. This book includes an extensive amount of data on trends and geographic variation in the prevalence of different problems, as well as telling examples – both recent and historical – from a variety of countries to support its key arguments.

Employing a bold multidisciplinary approach, the authors draw on insights from across the social sciences, including sociology, economics, anthropology, criminology, and psychology. Throughout the book, students are introduced to analytical concepts such as free-riding, herding behaviour, principal-agent relations and moral hazard. These concepts are essential tools for better understanding the roots of many societal problems that regularly make headlines in the news. This improved understanding will, in turn, be critical for ultimately finding solutions to these problems.

Nan Dirk de Graaf is an Official Fellow at Nuffield College and Professor of Sociology at the University of Oxford. His research interests include social stratification – especially educational attainment and how social mobility affects political preferences, health and attitudes, sociology of religion, pro-social behaviour, and political sociology.

Dingeman Wiertz is a Lecturer in Social Science and British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at University College London. Having received training in economics as well as sociology, his research interests include civic engagement, inter-ethnic relations, social networks, economic hardship, political attitudes, school choice, and residential segregation.

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