Contemporary social evils
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Joseph Rowntree Foundatio
About this book
Which underlying problems pose the greatest threat to British society in the 21st century? A hundred years after its philanthropist founder identified poverty, alcohol, drugs and gambling among the social evils of his time, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation initiated a major consultation among leading thinkers, activists and commentators, as well as the wider public. The findings have now been brought together in this fascinating book. Individual contributors range across the political spectrum but the book also reports the results from a web survey and consultation with groups whose voices are less often heard. The results suggest that while some evils - like poverty - endure as undisputed causes of social harm, more recent sources of social misery, such as an alleged rise in selfish consumerism and a perceived decline in personal responsibility and family commitment, attract controversy.
Topics
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Front Matter
i -
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Contents
iii -
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Foreword
v -
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Acknowledgements
vii -
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Notes on contributors
viii -
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Introduction
1 -
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‘Social evils’ and ‘social problems’ in Britain since 1904
5 - Public voices
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Uneasy and powerless: views from the online consultation
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Truncated opportunities: eliciting unheard voices on social evils
51 -
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Living with social evils: further views from people in disadvantaged groups
65 - Viewpoints
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Preface
85 -
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Has there been a decline in values in British society?
91 -
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Social evils and social good
103 -
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Unkind, risk averse and untrusting: if this is today’s society, can we change it?
115 -
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What and who is it we don’t trust?
125 -
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Fear and distrust in 21st-century Britain
135 -
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The absence of society
147 -
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A wrong turn in the search for freedom?
159 -
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Individualism and community: investing in civil society
169 -
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Opportunity and aspiration: two sides of the same coin?
181 -
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Five types of inequality
193 -
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The poor and the unequal
203 - Reflections
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Reflections on social evils and human nature
215 -
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Afterword
225 -
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How the ‘social evils’ consultations were organised
233 -
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Index
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