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Alicia Adsera
Princeton University
Jason DeParle
New York Times
Peter Ikeler
City University of New York
Ana Luz González
University of California, Los Angeles
Lisa Sanbonmatsu
National Bureau of Economic Research
Jeffrey R. Kling
National Bureau of Economic Research
Ronald C. Kessler
Harvard Medical School
Lisa A. Gennetian
Brookings Institution
Ali A. Ghanghro
University of Ottowa

In the latest issue of Contemporary Sociology, Kevin T. Leicht reviews our book, Old Assumptions, New Realities: Ensuring Economic Security for Working Families in the 21st Century:

The recent global recession has provided a ripe opportunity for social scientists and policy analysts to take stock of what happened, who was most damaged, who needs the most help right now, and what can be done to prevent further long-term economic damage to American working families. This edited volume by Robert Plotnick, Marcia Meyers, Jennifer Romich, and Steven Smith provides a strong analysis and roadmap for moving ahead that highlights many of the long-term vulnerabilities faced by the “99 percenters” (as the Occupy Wall Street Movement calls them) and (more directly) the “60 percenters,” those hovering around the median of the family income distribution (currently around $62,000), and those below them.

[...] This book is a must-read for sociologists interested in the evolution of new social policies and interested publics who are concerned that too many Americans are facing economic and social catastrophe.