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United Nations NGO Committee on Sustainable Development
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The Moral Underground: How Ordinary Americans Subvert an Unfair Economy |  | Author: Lisa Dodson Publisher: New Press, The Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $15.20 as of 9/8/2010 23:40 CDT details You Save: $9.75 (39%)
New (30) Used (6) from $15.20
Seller: pbshopus Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 54,989
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 240 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.9
ISBN: 1595584722 Dewey Decimal Number: 339.20973 EAN: 9781595584724 ASIN: 1595584722
Publication Date: December 8, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description I pad their paychecks because you can't live on what they make. --SUPERVISOR OF A FAST-FOOD PIZZA PLACE Here is a book that tells the real story of the countless unsung heroes who bend or break the rules to help those millions of Americans with impossible schedules, paychecks, and lives. Whether it is a nurse choosing to treat an uninsured child, a supervisor deciding to overlook infractions, or a restaurant manager sneaking food to a worker's children, middle-class Americans are secretly refusing to be complicit in a fundamentally unfair system that puts a decent life beyond the reach of the working poor. In a national tale of a kind of economic disobedience--told in whispers to Lisa Dodson over the course of eight years of research across the country--hundreds of supervisors, teachers, and health care professionals describe intentional acts of defiance that together tell the story of a quiet revolt, of a moral underground that has grown in response to an immoral economy. A hugely important book, as hopeful as it is searing and with profound implications, The Moral Underground combines narratives and social research to document a whole new phenomenon--people reaching across America's economic fault line--and provides a missing national account of the human consequences and lives behind the business-page headlines.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
Inside look at the moral underground January 31, 2010 Oparu (Boston, MA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a really interesting book about the people who help poor people survive. It's about the courageous individuals who take risks to make sure that the poor can sustain their families. What an eye-opening account of what is going on behind the scenes!
Makes you think! August 3, 2010 Kevin G (Trumbull, CT) This book covers three main "middle level" economic backgrounds and how each is personally and professionally affected by the "poverty level" workforce. The theme of most people seem to be the same throughout the book as most are willing and ready to help out hard working mothers who cannot make ends meet, no matter what it takes. A few hard nosed curmudgeons pop into the picture from time to time and take a very conservative look at the topic at hand, but their theories are quickly quelled by the good hearted managers, teachers, priests, etc. It makes you ask yourself if you would do the same thing for a worker of yours no matter what the consequence was. It definitely presents a moral business dilemma.
Note the author makes sure you know she wrote this book for the "poverty level" workforce who are not on drugs and lazy/living off the government. This book is written about all the other people working below a livable wage trying to make it in this country.
It would be nice if this book provided a more direct analysis on how to fix these types of issues as I think that is what most readers would be looking forward to reading about after picking up this book. It is definitely more of a documentary on her findings based on the studies/group studies she conducted. But I truly feel this book does a great job of conveying how tough/impossible life is for honest people who make $8 an hour and have kids.
Imagine working 13 hour days with no insurance for very little money and supporting kids who need you desperately and you cannot be there for them? Physically or mentally? Dealing with public transportation and bosses that do not understand your plight? Teachers who think you are neglecting your own kids just because you cannot take a day off of work for a special one on one meeting? Dealing with the mental health issues that poverty brings along that ultimately effects you and your family like Dominos? I cannot imagine that life.
Compassion despite the system January 26, 2010 John F. Schultz (Cheyenne, Wyoming) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I found this book to be very interesting and inspiring. It made me look at ways that I can take an unfair system and change it for the better.
Great Subject - Needs a Little More Analysis May 20, 2010 Christopher Good (Sparks, NV USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The Moral Underground addresses a very important subject and is a jarring wake-up call about the ways our economy has changed over the last generation. "Welfare reform" has "succeeded" in that we've removed the safety net; now the working poor get paid less than it costs to live, and this has terrible effects on children and on other workers up and down the economic scale. That's all true, and Dodson says so, but I wish she would have gone a little deeper in her analyisis of this subject. This seemed more like a metabook in that much of it was about how the book was written. It's a bad sign when a 200 page book begins referring to itself in the past tense 20 pages from the end. She keeps introducing the subject and describing what she's about to tell us, and then she refers back to the introduction during the telling. I kept wondering when we were going to get to the meat.
Good topic, horrible presentation August 9, 2010 A.C. 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
You will not hear an argument from me about the pressing need for change in some of America's institutions in regards to labor, families and health insurance. But frankly, this book takes the idea that there needs to be change and slaughters it. There is no active thesis that binds the book together. The chapters and parts of the book move haphazardly along in a disjointed and unorganized way. The interviews are all basically the same story, there is not much insight revealed after the first couple in a part of the book and the analysis that follows adds nothing constructive to the discussion of the issue, not to mention it is intensely biased in favor of one side. I see really no point in this book that promotes itself as a reason to read this book-I gave it two stars because I like the issue, not the book itself. At the end of every book, the reader has the right to ask "so, what?" There was no answer to that question in this book-no call to action, no unique insight. Just repeating the work of others and monotonous interviews.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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