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Racism, Policy and Politics

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Race has been a prominent public policy issue in the UK for decades and there is growing interest in academia, but it is often caught in a repetitive cycle of progress and regress. This book analys...
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  • 05 January 2018
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Race has been a prominent public policy issue in the UK for decades and there is growing interest in academia, but it is often caught in a repetitive cycle of progress and regress. This book analyses and bridges that gap by providing a unique insight into the relationship between race and ethnicity scholarship and the reality of ‘real world’ policy and politics.

Drawing on the author’s academic work as well as his background working in public policy bodies, it goes beyond ‘impact’ debates, public sociology, diversity and post-race, to examine the changing context for researching race and racism, including media and policy debates and the ways in which institutional racism has played out in public policy settings since the Stephen Lawrence inquiry.

Combining theory and applied policy analysis in an accessible way, it guides the reader through the cultural and political changes in race and racism in recent decades and identifies the challenges and opportunities for policy and politically-engaged scholarship in future, clearly mapping the pitfalls and possibilities for critical work on race and racism.

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Price: $38.95
Pages: 208
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 05 January 2018
ISBN: 9781447319580
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, Ethnic groups and multicultural studies, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Sociology, Crime and criminology
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Karim Murji is a Professor based in the Graduate School at the University of West London and was previously at the Open University, UK. He has written widely on culture, ethnicity and racism as applied to fields such as race equality, policing, public sociology, and diaspora and identity. Since 2013 he has been part of the editorial team of Sociology, and, with Sarah Neal, he is the Editor of Current Sociology.

Introduction: The ‘changing same’;

Racial reality and unreality;

Racialisation;

Race critical scholarship and public engagement;

Sociology and Institutional Racism;

The impacts of social science;

The end(s) of institutional racism;

Racialised numerics;

Framing riots.