A Yankee Book Peddler UK Core Title for 2015 ’While global inequalities have had popular as well as academic attention for years, in recent years the developed world has suddenly woken up to the rising inequality within wealthy nations, particularly in the United States. So far, explanations for this growing inequality have focused on changes in the global economy and its impact within nations. Max Haller has written a well-researched and timely book showing how inequality within nations is more complex and involves differences in racial stratification as well as economic changes.’ Harold Kerbo, California Polytechnic State University, USA ’This book is a remarkable achievement. Haller has produced a major and original contribution to the study of global social stratification and inequality by revealing the enormous significance of ethnic divisions and ethnic exploitation in global patterns of inequality. He proves this beyond doubt both through statistical analysis of common global patterns and through regional case-studies of the many existing varieties of ethnic stratification.’ Michael Mann, University of California, Los Angeles, USA ’This is a magisterial, world-encompassing contribution to our understanding of the variable economic inequality within nations, focusing on the roles of historical experience of slavery and of ethnic diversity and stratification.’ Göran Therborn, University of Cambridge, UK and author of The Killing Fields of Inequality ’Max Haller’s work is commendable for its comparative perspective, comprehensive coverage and wealth of empirical data, deftness of analysis and for its historically-sensitive approach. Refreshingly, the volume goes beyond arm-chair theorizing about inequality and offers, on the basis of a vast and carefully-marshalled array of empirical data, some valuable suggestions for reducing levels of inequality between and within nations and mitigating the suffering and hardships of excluded and margina