This book shows why learning to think sociologically can help to improve our social justice efforts, with each chapter offering tips on how to think better about social justice while giving examples of bad sociological thinking.
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"In this important and timely book, sociologist Bradley Campbell challenges his home discipline to be clearer and more intellectually open than it has been in recent decades. Campbell goes beyond simple criticism, however. In How to Think Better about Social Justice Why Good Sociology Matters, he provides us with a much-needed road map to get there." Ilana Redstone, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Faculty Director of the Mill Institute, University of Austin, USA
"Does sociology have a role in the struggle for social justice? In this engaging and accessible book, Bradley Campbell provides insightful, clear-headed guidance as to what sociological expertise can and cannot contribute to tackling the difficult moral and political problems of our age, or indeed any age." Mark Cooney, Professor of Sociology, University of Georgia, USA
"Does sociology have a role in the struggle for social justice? In this engaging and accessible book, Bradley Campbell provides insightful, clear-headed guidance as to what sociological expertise can and cannot contribute to tackling the difficult moral and political problems of our age, or indeed any age." Mark Cooney, Professor of Sociology, University of Georgia, USA