'Race', Gender, Social Welfare: Encounters in a Postcolonial SocietyISBN: 978-0-7456-2284-2
Hardcover
248 pages
August 2000, Polity
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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'This post-structuralist analysis permits and requires a close
engagement with the shifting complexities of everyday experience
and connections with overarching structures of power, politics and
professions ... the analysis of parliamentary debates is
well-handled, tackling this well-worn ground with fresh insight ...
Lewis's book provides a rigorous and invigorating analysis which
demands that black and Asian women's voices be heard in debates
over the provision of welfare.' Ethic and Racial
Studies
'Gail Lewis's excellent contribution to this field indicates
just what we have been missing. Lewis's analysis of racial
formation in social welfare policy and practice provides a textured
and thoughtful analysis with important implications' American
Journal of Sociology
'Those aiming to shift social work in anti-racist (and
anti-sexist) directions have been provided with a solid text
addressing issues basic to their tasks ... Lewis provides a richly
layered analysis of the complex relations between social policy,
social work, 'race' and gender in Britain.' European Journal of
Social Work
'Gail Lewis has produced an impressive study, (she) raises important questions about the way we think about the social, about work and about the influence that social policies have on our lives.' Feminist Theory