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From Middle Income to Poor: Downward Mobility Among Displaced Steelworkers

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

From Middle Income to Poor: Downward Mobility Among Displaced Steelworkers

Contributors:

By (Author) Allison Zippay

ISBN:

9780275937911

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

21st November 1991

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

331.137974893

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

144

Description

Allison Zippay charts the decline of displaced blue-collar workers, part of the fallout of the past decade's dramatic economic shift from manufacturing to an expanded, service-based economy. She challenges the widely held assumption that these workers have been absorbed into the post-industrial economy and raises questions regarding the real nature of their occupational transition. Actually a case study of the Shenango Valley in western Pennsylvania, where an estimated 6,600 jobs were lost due to plant closings, From Middle Income to Poor is unique in its coverage of the vital issue of economic dislocation. Zeroing in on long-term unemployment and income loss, Zippay finds that many of the displaced workers remain unemployed or underemployed and have slipped in status from middle-income to poor. The volume uses data gathered from interviews to explore how persons with a history of steady blue-collar employment have coped with economic dislocation and downward lifestyle shifts, and in the process presents a path-breaking community portrait of industrial displacement. Early chapters focus on blue-collar workers in the 1980s and the economic and social dimensions of the manufacturing decline. They describe the Shenango Valley community setting, mill work, mill workers, and how the lifestyles of the local residents have been shaped by long-standing blue collar traditions. Later chapters investigate the changes in income and employment that prompted a downward slide and examine the processes of rebuilding. Chapter Seven cites incidences of depression and other emotional distress as well as changes in perception of self and community. The final chapter discusses the implications of thefindings and recommends actions that could improve the displaced workers' social and economic well-being. Sociologists, policy analysts, social workers, and those in the fields of labor relations, social welfare, and social economics will find that this intense scrutiny of the Shenango Valley has far-reaching implications for the national economy in the 1990s and beyond.

Reviews

. . . useful case study-Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
As a supplementary text the book could make a contribution to many types of classes. It is useful on at least three levels: as an excellent study of what happens to workers who lose their means of earning a living, as an example of a tight descriptive study, and as a basis for discussing labor policy, technological change, or political policy related to jobs in the United States.-Labor Studies Journal
. . . useful case studyJournal of Sociology and Social Welfare
." . . useful case study"-Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
"As a supplementary text the book could make a contribution to many types of classes. It is useful on at least three levels: as an excellent study of what happens to workers who lose their means of earning a living, as an example of a tight descriptive study, and as a basis for discussing labor policy, technological change, or political policy related to jobs in the United States."-Labor Studies Journal

Author Bio

ALLISON ZIPPAY is an Assistant Professor of Policy and Planning at the School of Social Work, Rutgers University. She has served as a teaching fellow at Harvard University and as a planning consultant to numerous community service agencies. Her research and writing focus on poverty, underemployment, and community planning.

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