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Broke: Fixing Britain's poverty crisis
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
Broke: Fixing Britain's poverty crisis
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Tom Clark
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Physical Properties |
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ISBN/Barcode |
9781785907944
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Classifications | Dewey:362.50941 |
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Audience | |
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Biteback Publishing
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Imprint |
Biteback Publishing
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NZ Release Date |
7 July 2023 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
A dozen years into austerity, statistical warning lights are flashing to suggest a return to types of deprivation that we once imagined we had consigned to the history books. The official count of rough sleepers has doubled, recorded malnutrition in hospital patients has tripled and dependence on foodbanks has rocketed by an order of magnitude. Amid rising prices and falling confidence, all the forecasts are for such numbers getting even worse. And yet it has never been statistics but rather individual human stories - from the fictionalised accounts of Dickens to the faithful reporting of Orwell and Priestley - that have seared the reality of hard times into the imagination. In Broke, Tom Clark assembles today's masters of social reportage, including Dani Garavelli, Samira Shackle and Daniel Trilling, and tasks each with bringing us face-to-face with those at the hardest end of the cost-of-living crisis. With Joel Goodman's bespoke photography bringing the characters to life, and several of the writers having had first-hand experience of the issues raised, this urgent collection restores some badly needed empathy to the public discussion. Moreover, by setting out possible reforms and highlighting the fortitude and resistance with which so many destitute Britons are answering their plight, it encourages hopes of a future in which the spectres of hunger, cold and homelessness are finally laid to rest.
Author Biography
Tom Clark is a fellow at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, a visiting fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford, and a contributing editor at Prospect, the leading monthly magazine he edited from 2016 to 2021. He previously spent a decade at The Guardian, specialising in social affairs and economics, and rising to be the paper's chief leader writer. Before journalism, he had spells working in Whitehall and at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Clark's 2014 book Hard Times: Inequality, Recession, Aftermath, co-written with Anthony Heath, made sense of the fallout from the financial crisis with the same mix of human stories and analysis that gives Broke such clout. It was hailed as a must-read by everyone from Thomas Piketty to Gordon Brown.
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