Brunswick Books
Home • Ordering • Contact Us • About Us • Independent Booksellers • Catalogues • Publisher Services • Events & Information • Shopping Cart

Find Books:

by Subject Category
  • African Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Biographies
  • Business
  • Canadian Studies
  • Class
  • Community/Urban Studies
  • Criminology / Law
  • Cultural Studies
  • Development Studies
  • Disability Studies
  • Ecology/Environment
  • Economics
  • Education
  • Family Studies
  • Fiction
  • Food/Food Security
  • Gender Studies
  • Gerontology
  • Globalization
  • Health /Health Care
  • History
  • Immigration
  • Imperialism
  • Indigenous Studies
  • International Studies
  • Labour Studies
  • Latin America
  • Literature
  • Media
  • Middle East
  • Mothering
  • Music
  • Peace Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Poetry
  • Political Economy
  • Politics
  • Public Policy
  • Queer Studies
  • Racism/Race Relations
  • Religion Studies
  • Research
  • Short Stories
  • Social / Political Theory
  • Social Movements
  • Social Work
  • Socialist Register
  • Sociology
  • Technology
  • Women’s Studies
  • Young Adult
Featured Books Forthcoming

Brunswick Books is the new name of Fernwood Books.  For over 35 years we have been providing books from independent and progressive publishers.

How Societies Work
  • Publisher: Fernwood
  • ISBN: 9781552664650
  • 5th
  • Price: $54.95 CAD
  • Hardcover ISBN: 9781552664810
  • Hardcover Price: $74.95 CAD
  • Publication Date: Mar 2012
  • Pages: 384

Buy Now!
Buy Hardcover

Examination Copy

Professors/Instructors in Canada: We will provide examination copies of our books for consideration as course texts. We do reserve the right to limit examination copy requests and/or to provide books on a pre-payment or approval basis.

Request Exam Copy

How Societies Work

Class, Power and Change, 5th Edition

Joanne Naiman

In 2011, protesters around the world — including Canada — called for changes to the societies in which they live. Many observers were asking: “What do they want?” Some answers to this question can be found in How Societies Work, a unique and accessible introductory sociology textbook that introduces students to the structure of contemporary societies and the power relationships within them. In contrast to most introductory textbooks, How Societies Work explores a broad range of sociological concepts and theories while simultaneously creating a coherent picture of modern societies. Drawing on fields as diverse as anthropology, genetics, economics, social psychology, history and politics, this innovative and popular text looks at both the roots of modern societies and the currentstructures within them. This approach helps undergraduate students make sense of our complex social world and encourages them to connect the social world to their own lived experiences.

This extensively revised and updated fifth edition includes discussions of the roots of the recent global economic crisis and worldwide responses to it, growing social inequality, broader global struggles for change, the growth of the security state in Canada and the sudden resurgence of political protest in North America. The final chapter looks to the future, examining such issues as the possible consequences of climate change, increased forced migration of peoples and the changing dynamic of global power. More boxes, quotes and “think about it” elements have been added to the fifth edition, while the language, clarity of presentation and many examples make it even more accessible to readers. It is an introductory textbook that truly engages students in the “sociological imagination.”

This fifth edition is presented in a large format, making it easier to read and even more student friendly. A testbank and power point presentation are available for instructors upon request.

Contents

Sociology and the Study of Society • Is Human Behaviour the Result of Our Biology? • Culture, Society and History • The Basis of Modern Societies • Analyzing Social Class • Living in Capitalist Societies • The Social Construction of Ideas and Knowledge • The Role of the State • Neoliberalism and Globalization • Inequality of Wealth and Income • Race and Ethnicity • Gender Issues • Looking Toward the Future • References • Index

About the Author

Joanne Naiman is Professor Emerita of Sociology at Ryerson University in Toronto. During her thirty-three years there she taught a variety of undergraduate courses — urban sociology, women’s studies, social change,and gender roles, in addition to introductory sociology. She is also the author of a number of academic articles, including “Dueling Identities and Faculty Unions: A Canadian Case Study”(with Mike Burke), in Cogs in the Classroom Factory: The Shifting Identities of Academic Labor, Deborah Herman and Julie Schmid, eds., Praeger Press (2003); and “Left Feminism and the Return to Class” Monthly Review, No. 48 (June 1996).

Throughout her career she was involved in a variety of activist organizations—from involvement in the anti-apartheid and peace movements to efforts to support and protect public education in Ontario. Since retiring from full-time teaching in 2004 she has moved to Vancouver where she continues to volunteer in numerous organizations that work to make the world a better place.


Home • Ordering • Contact Us • About Us • Independent Booksellers • Catalogues • Publisher Services • Events • Shopping Cart

Website by Triggers & Sparks | Contact Us: info@brunswickbooks.ca / 416-703-3598