How Claims Spread Cross-National Diffusion of Social Problems
$25.95
8%off
$2.29
Excellent Customer Service
& Return policy. Ships
Fast. E... [more] Buy with confidence.
Excellent Customer Service
& Return policy. Ships
Fast. Expedite Shipping
Available. [less]
Own This Book? Sell It
9780202306544
ISBN:0202306542
Publisher: Aldine Transaction Summary: Best's anthology examines for the first time how diverse social issues -- road rage, the metric system, gun control, and abortion are among those included -- migrate across national boundaries, modifying themselves from place to place as a result of different claims, claimsmakers, and policy responses. This unique collection, assembled from new research by an international group of social problems scholars, will fill [read more]- 30-Day No-Hassle Returns
- Fast, Same-Day Customer Service
- The Best Prices on Textbook Rentals
- Find student loan options quickly and easily
- Compare loans to find the best fit for you
- Apply for the loan that meets your needs
9780202306544
ISBN:
0202306542
Publisher: Aldine Transaction
Best's anthology examines for the first time how diverse social issues -- road rage, the metric system, gun control, and abortion are among those included -- migrate across national boundaries, modifying themselves from place to place as a result of different claims, claimsmakers, and policy responses. This unique collection, assembled from new research by an international group of social problems scholars, will fill a gap in undergraduate and graduate level studies in the constructionist analyses of social problems, as well as in political science, public policy, and criminology. Claims concerning one social problem often influence those about another: claimsmakers borrow rhetoric and tactics from one another. In some cases, experienced claimsmakers join efforts to call attention to other social problems: compelling images (e.g., the threatened child or random violence) link claims about different problems and reactions to one set of claims. These case studies describe very different processes, ranging from deliberate attempts to disseminate social problem claims to developments that were more inadvertent, from successes in which social problem constructions spread to new countries to failures in which claims were sown, but failed to take root. They are intended to suggest that the diffusion of social problems is neither simple nor automatic.
- Track your recent orders.
- See our shipping rates & policies.
- Return an item (here's our Return Policy).

