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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Harvey Alan Siegal , Edward SagarinPublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9781412854689ISBN 10: 1412854687 Pages: 235 Publication Date: 30 October 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews-The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature.- --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature. --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature. --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology Outposts of the Forgotten is an ethnographic study of the social organization of welfare hotel tenants on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The author describes the economic and political history of New York City's welfare hotels, tracing their early development as a response to the need for cheap housing of unattached urban groups and their contemporary function as community half-way houses for the poor, the deviant, the socially marginal. Siegal argues that, increasingly, these hotels are servicing individuals whose former alternative would have been limited to custodially oriented institutions. --B. Jouce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology Outposts of the Forgotten is an ethnographic study of the social organization of welfare hotel tenants on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The author describes the economic and political history of New York City's welfare hotels, tracing their early development as a response to the need for cheap housing of unattached urban groups and their contemporary function as community half-way houses for the poor, the deviant, the socially marginal. Siegal argues that, increasingly, these hotels are servicing individuals whose former alternative would have been limited to custodially oriented institutions. --B. Jouce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology Outposts of the Forgotten is an ethnographic study of the social organization of welfare hotel tenants on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The author describes the economic and political history of New York City's welfare hotels, tracing their early development as a response to the need for cheap housing of unattached urban groups and their contemporary function as community half-way houses for the poor, the deviant, the socially marginal. Siegal argues that, increasingly, these hotels are servicing individuals whose former alternative would have been limited to custodially oriented institutions. --B. Jouce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature. --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature. --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology -The sociological study of s.r.o. (single room occupancy) hotels has been badly neglected. . . . The author's analysis of the forces that have shaped these communities of isolates and deviants is an important contribution to the s.r.o. literature.- --B. Joyce Stephens, Contemporary Sociology Author InformationHarvey Alan Siegal was professor in the department of community health at the Wright State University School of Medicine, USA and director of the Center for Interventions, Treatment and Addictions Research. Edward Sagarin (1913-1986), also known by his pen name Donald Webster Cory, was an American professor of sociology and criminology at the City University of New York, USA and a writer. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |