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Class & Economy as Practices of Power : Barbara Ehrenreich

Class & Economy as Practices of Power : Barbara Ehrenreich. Nickel & Dimed. Health Insurance in the US. 49.9 million -- The number of uninsured Americans in 2010. That's 16.3% of the total population. 18.4% -- Percentage of uninsured Americans younger than 65 in 2010.

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Class & Economy as Practices of Power : Barbara Ehrenreich

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  1. Class & Economy as Practices of Power:Barbara Ehrenreich Nickel & Dimed

  2. Health Insurance in the US • 49.9 million -- The number of uninsured Americans in 2010. That's 16.3% of the total population. • 18.4% -- Percentage of uninsured Americans younger than 65 in 2010. • 28.4% -- The percentage of Americans 25 to 34 without insurance. • 7.3 million -- The number of children in the United States without health insurance, 9.8% of all children in the country. • 15.4% - The percentage of children living in poverty who are also uninsured. • 26.9% -- Percentage of people earning less than $25,000 a year who are also uninsured. • 256.2 million -- The number of Americans who were insured in 2010. • 24.6% - The percentage of uninsured people in Texas, the highest of any state. • 5.6% - The percentage of uninsured people in Massachusetts, the lowest of any state. • http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/27/politics/btn-health-care

  3. Intersectionality • An interlocking matrix of power • The specific point at which an individual exists within an architecture of power • Race, gender, class, nationality, religious affiliation, ability, sexual orientation, etc. etc. etc. • Foucault: “a series of mechanisms for unbalancing power relations definitively and everywhere; hence the persistence in regarding them as the humble, but concrete form of every morality, whereas they are a set of physico-political techniques.” (223)

  4. Demographic characteristics of poverty-level-wage workers vs. non-poverty-level-wage workers, 2011

  5. Share of entering classes at top universities and community colleges coming from families in various socioeconomic fourths • Source: Economic Policy Institute

  6. Share of children in the bottom income fourth ending up in either the bottom or top income fourth as adults, by race

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