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Cover of Recent Social Trends in the United States, 1960-1990

Recent Social Trends in the United States, 1960-1990

by Theodore Caplow

Book Details

Publisher:McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Published:1994-03-21
Pages:612
Format:BOOK
Language:en

Reading Info

About This Book

On Rachel Carson and her work and on current environmental challenges. The four authors present information on various American trends: demographic, macroeconomic, and macro-technological. Descriptions, tables, and graphs trace the dynamics of population, specifically in relation to the expansion which followed the 1982-83 recession, and analyze achievements in intelligence, genetic engineering, and space travel. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Our Review

This comprehensive analysis charts three decades of American social transformation, examining everything from demographic shifts to technological breakthroughs. The authors present a detailed portrait of how population dynamics evolved following the 1982-83 recession, while also exploring groundbreaking developments in genetic engineering and space exploration. Through meticulous data presentation including tables and graphs, the book captures the complex interplay between macroeconomic forces and societal change. It offers readers both a historical record and analytical framework for understanding this pivotal period in American development.

What distinguishes this work is its ambitious scope—connecting seemingly disparate trends into a cohesive narrative about national progress. The inclusion of Rachel Carson's environmental legacy alongside discussions of intelligence research creates unexpected but illuminating connections across different domains of social science. Readers interested in statistical sociology and historical pattern analysis will find this particularly valuable, as it demonstrates how quantitative data reveals deeper cultural shifts. This study ultimately provides the essential context needed to understand how late 20th-century America became the society we recognize today.

Themes

Social Science

Subjects

Social Science