Gauntlett - Men are shown as heroes and women as victims, Seager - Men do more paid work, women more domestic work, men have more leisure time, Benatar - Men more likely to have least desirable and most dangerous jobs, Hakim - Horizontal and vertical segregation in the workplace, Barron and Norris - Dual labour market - women in secondary jobs, Roberts - Upper/middle classes can fix their salaries and job perks, Willis - 'Learning to labour' working class boys reject education, Bottero - Poorer areas and jobs have more hazards, Sutherland - Crime has high incidence in lower socio-economic class, Chambliss - Saints and roughnecks treated differently by law enforcement, Pearson - Young people shown as folk devils, Furlong and Cartmel - Life tasks engage young are more important than politics, Hobbs - Nocturnal economy - young out and about at night so more likely to commit or be a victim of crime, Miller - Focal concerns of working class lads - more likely to commit crime, Biggs - Old people shown as feeble, vague and forgetful, Heath and Yi Cheung - Ethnic penalty - disadvantage that ethnic minorities face compared to British whites of same age and human capital, Davidson - Concrete ceiling, Gillborn - African-Carribean boys labelled as 'unruly', 'disrespectful', 'difficult to control' in school, Reiner - Racist police canteen culture, Van Dijk - Black people shown as criminal in the British news,

Inequality trends research

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