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the Index of Leading Cultural Indicators: American Society at End Twentieth Century

the Index of Leading Cultural Indicators: American Society at End Twentieth Century in Bloomington, MN
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For decades Americans have turned to the Commerce Department's Index of Leading Economic Indicators to spot trends in the economy.
The Index of Leading Cultural Indicators
brings a similar kind of empirical analysis to the moral, social, and behavioral condition of American society from 1960 to the presenta vivid, clearly accessible portrait in numbers of who and where we are as a nation.
First published in 1994 and now completely updated and considerably expanded, it draws from a wide array of government sources and academic studies to offer comprehensive chapters on crime, the family, youth behavior, education, popular culture, and religion, as well as new chapters on civic participation, international comparisons, and decade-by-decade comparisons. For each topic covered, there are statistical and numerical breakdowns; tables and graphs; ranking of states; and a "Factual Overview" interpreting the data.
should serve as the starting point of any discussion about America's moral and cultural condition.
William J. Bennett's provocative introduction provides the essential context and perspective for the data he's collected, offering an assessment of the problems besetting modern America. Some have gotten bettermost notably, crime and welfare ratesleading him to conclude that politics and public engagement in social issues can make more of a difference than he once thought. But there is much else of a worrying nature, and Bennett pulls no punches in identifying pathologies and laying out the challenges we face. No one who cares about American society and a whole range of social issues can afford to be without this essential volumea statistical snapshot, an invaluable sourcebook, and a call to action.
The Index of Leading Cultural Indicators
brings a similar kind of empirical analysis to the moral, social, and behavioral condition of American society from 1960 to the presenta vivid, clearly accessible portrait in numbers of who and where we are as a nation.
First published in 1994 and now completely updated and considerably expanded, it draws from a wide array of government sources and academic studies to offer comprehensive chapters on crime, the family, youth behavior, education, popular culture, and religion, as well as new chapters on civic participation, international comparisons, and decade-by-decade comparisons. For each topic covered, there are statistical and numerical breakdowns; tables and graphs; ranking of states; and a "Factual Overview" interpreting the data.
should serve as the starting point of any discussion about America's moral and cultural condition.
William J. Bennett's provocative introduction provides the essential context and perspective for the data he's collected, offering an assessment of the problems besetting modern America. Some have gotten bettermost notably, crime and welfare ratesleading him to conclude that politics and public engagement in social issues can make more of a difference than he once thought. But there is much else of a worrying nature, and Bennett pulls no punches in identifying pathologies and laying out the challenges we face. No one who cares about American society and a whole range of social issues can afford to be without this essential volumea statistical snapshot, an invaluable sourcebook, and a call to action.