Tackling inequalities: Where are we now and what can be done?
Tackling inequalities: Where are we now and what can be done?
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Abstract
The growing divide between the poor and the rich is the most significant social change to have occurred during the last few decades. In 1997, the Labour government inherited a country more unequal than at any other time since the Second World War. This book brings together a collection of contributions on inequalities in the main areas of British life: income, wealth, standard of living, employment, education, housing, crime, and health. It charts the extent of the growth in inequalities and offers a coherent critique of the Labour government's policies aimed at those tackling this crisis. The contributors use and interpret official data to show how statistics are often misused to obscure or distort the reality of inequality. A range of alternative policies for reducing inequalities in Britain are discussed and set within the global context of the need for international action.
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Front Matter
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One
Introduction
Christina Pantazis
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Two
Inequalities in income, wealth and standard of living in Britain
David Gordon
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Three
Inequalities in employment: problems of spatial divergence
Ivan Turok
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Four
Educational inequalities and Education Action Zones
Ian Plewis
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Five
How can we end inequalities in housing?
Alan Murie
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Six
Tackling inequalities in crime and social harm
Christina Pantazis
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Seven
Poverty across the life-course and health
George Davey Smith andDavid Gordon
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Eight
Inequalities in health service provision: how research findings are ignored
Walter Barker andColin Chalmers
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Nine
A mortality league table for Cabinet Ministers?
Danny Dorling
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Ten
Ending world poverty in the 21st century
Peter Townsend
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End Matter
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