-
The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class (Paperback)
$29.99 - Save $1.80 (5%) - RRP $31.79 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |- Also available in...
- Hardback $86.13
Short Description for The PrecariatThis book introduces the Precariat - the growing number of people facing lives of insecurity, doing work without a past or future. This book considers why the Precariat is growing, what fears it faces, what political dangers it represents and what would make a politics of paradise to overcome them.
Full description- Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
- Published: 24 July 2011
- Format: Paperback 208 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Social Classes | Sociology | Sociology: Work & Labour | Industrial Relations
- ISBN 13: 9781849663519 ISBN 10: 1849663513
- Sales rank: 19,295
Other books
Full description for The Precariat
Neo-liberal policies and institutional changes have produced a huge and growing number of people with sufficiently common experiences to be called an emerging class. In this book Guy Standing introduces what he calls 'The Precariat' - a growing number of people across the world living and working precariously, usually in a series of short-term jobs, without recourse to stable occupational identities or careers, stable social protection or protective regulations relevant to them. They include migrants, but also locals. Standing argues that this class of people could produce new instabilities in society. They are increasingly frustrated and dangerous because they have no voice, and hence they are vulnerable to the siren calls of extreme political parties. He outlines a new kind of good society, with more people actively involved in civil society and the precariat re-engaged. He goes on to consider one way to a new better society - an unconditional basic income for everyone, contributed by the state, which could be topped up through earned incomes. This is a topical, and a radical book, which will appeal to a broad market concerned by the increasing problems of labour insecurity and civic disengagement.

