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Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality


Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality

Paperback by Wacquant, Loïc (University of California at Berkeley)

Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality

£17.99

ISBN:
9780745631257
Publication Date:
14 Dec 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:
Polity Press
Pages:
360 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 13 May 2024
Urban Outcasts: A Comparative Sociology of Advanced Marginality

Description

Breaking with the exoticizing cast of public discourse and conventional research, Urban Outcasts takes the reader inside the black ghetto of Chicago and the deindustrializing banlieue of Paris to discover that urban marginality is not everywhere the same. Drawing on a wealth of original field, survey and historical data, Loïc Wacquant shows that the involution of America's urban core after the 1960s is due not to the emergence of an 'underclass', but to the joint withdrawal of market and state fostered by public policies of racial separation and urban abandonment. In European cities, by contrast, the spread of districts of 'exclusion' does not herald the formation of ghettos. It stems from the decomposition of working-class territories under the press of mass unemployment, the casualization of work and the ethnic mixing of populations hitherto segregated, spawning urban formations akin to 'anti-ghettos'. Comparing the US 'Black Belt' with the French 'Red Belt' demonstrates that state structures and policies play a decisive role in the articulation of class, race and place on both sides of the Atlantic. It also reveals the crystallization of a new regime of marginality fuelled by the fragmentation of wage labour, the retrenchment of the social state and the concentration of dispossessed categories in stigmatized areas bereft of a collective idiom of identity and claims-making. These defamed districts are not just the residual 'sinkholes' of a bygone economic era, but also the incubators of the precarious proletariat emerging under neoliberal capitalism. Urban Outcasts sheds new light on the explosive mix of mounting misery, stupendous affluence and festering street violence resurging in the big cities of the First World. By specifying the different causal paths and experiential forms assumed by relegation in the American and the French metropolis, this book offers indispensable tools for rethinking urban marginality and for reinvigorating the public debate over social inequality and citizenship at century's dawn.

Contents

Detailed Contents ix Ghetto, Banlieue, Favela, et caetera: Tools for Rethinking Urban Marginality 1 Prologue: An Old Problem in a New World? 13 1 The Return of the Repressed: Riots, 'Race' and Dualization in Three Advanced Societies 15 Part I From Communal Ghetto to Hyperghetto 41 2 The State and Fate of the Dark Ghetto at Century's Close 43 3 The Cost of Racial and Class Exclusion in 'Bronzeville' 92 4 West Side Story: A High-Insecurity Ward in Chicago 119 Part II Black Belt, Red Belt 133 5 From Conflation to Comparison: How Banlieues and Ghetto Converge and Contrast 135 6 Stigma and Division: From the Core of Chicago to the Margins of Paris 163 7 Dangerous Places: Violence, Isolation and the State 199 Part III Looking Ahead: Urban Marginality in the Twenty-First Century 227 8 The Rise of Advanced Marginality: Specifications and Implications 229 9 Logics of Urban Polarization from Below 257 Postscript: Theory, History and Politics in Urban Analysis 280 Acknowledgements and Sources 288 References 291 Index 330

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