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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. To understand the plight of inner-city struggles whereby the lack of employment spawns a number of detrimental consequences is to realize the extent to which urban dwellers go to achieve the fundamental basics of human survival. William Wilson's When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor assumes a pragmatic perspective when illustrating just how critical the perpetually downward spiral of inner-city life has become, inasmuch as those individuals who want to work and break free of such socially deterministic constraints often do not possess or have access to the necessary resources to find or sustain a job. From being poorly education to having no transportation, Wilson (1997) points out how new urban poverty is inextricably interwoven with inner city residents' lack of essential components that would propel them into the job market; as a direct result, they suffer from myriad problems in direct correlation to their plight, not the least of which is the increased levels of HIV/AIDS. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCWWilson.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
basics of human survival. William Wilsons When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor assumes a pragmatic perspective when illustrating just how critical the perpetually downward spiral
of inner-city life has become, inasmuch as those individuals who want to work and break free of such socially deterministic constraints often do not possess or have access to the
necessary resources to find or sustain a job. From being poorly education to having no transportation, Wilson (1997) points out how new urban poverty is inextricably interwoven with inner
city residents lack of essential components that would propel them into the job market; as a direct result, they suffer from myriad problems in direct correlation to their plight, not
the least of which is the increased levels of HIV/AIDS. "Neighborhoods that offer few legitimate employment opportunities, inadequate job information networks, and poor schools lead to the disappearance of
work. That is, where jobs are scarce, where people rarely, if ever, have the opportunity to help their friends and neighbors find jobs, and where there is a disruptive
or degraded school life purporting to prepare youngsters for eventual participation in the workforce, many people eventually lose their feeling of connectedness to the work in the formal economy...These circumstances
also increase the likelihood that the residents will rely on illegitimate sources of income, thereby further weakening their attachment to the legitimate labor market" (Wilson, 1997, p. 52-53). Inner-city
life is no picnic for those who have to endure its ravages. Typically the area of society where a significantly dense population resides, this centralized section of the city
is home to considerably more ills than anywhere else. It is often the oldest, poorest and most overly populated, which establishes it as a haven for crime, violence and
...