18 results
Search Results
2. ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE, ENVIRONMENT AND PERFORMANCE: THE ROLE OF STRATEGIC CHOICE.
- Author
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Child, John
- Subjects
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SOCIAL psychology , *ORGANIZATIONAL structure , *PERFORMANCE standards , *ORGANIZATION , *ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper critically examines available theoretical models which have been derived front statistically established patterns of association between contextual and organizational variables. These models offer an interpretation of organizational structure as a product of organizational structure as a product of primarily economic constraints which contextual variable are impose. It is argued that available models in fact attempt to explain organization at one remove by ignoring the essentially political process, whereby power-holders within organizations decide upon courses of strategic action. This `strategic choice' typically includes not only the establishment of structural forms but also the manipulation of environmental features and the choice of relevant performance standards. A theoretical re-orientation this kind away from functional imperatives and towards' a recognition of political action is developed and illustrated in the man body of the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. SCIOLOGY OF KNOWLEDGE: NEW PERSPECTIVES.
- Author
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Elias, Norbert
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *RELATIVITY , *PHILOSOPHY , *DESPOTISM , *PHYSICS , *SCIENTIFIC method , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
The assumption underlying most philosophical theories of science, that one can apply to any scientific theory the concept of 'truth', is, with its implication of absolute finality, a hangover from the period when Newtonian physics was regarded as an absolute end state. The hidden mourning about the passing of this ideal science gives present philosophical approaches to science and scientific method their common stamp. The alternative seems to be the retreat into a sociological relativism. The paper shows that it is possible to work out a science-theoretical paradigm which avoids the pitfalls of both philosophical absolutism and sociological relativism. It suggests that instead of discussing criteria of a fictitious absolute end-state of knowledge, one might try to discover criteria and conditions for the advance of knowledge, non-scientific and scientific. A theory of this kind has the added advantage that it can be tested by, and can serve as a guide for, empirical studies of sciences and of knowledge generally. The paper also suggests that discussions about 'value-freedom' should be abandoned in favour of enquiries into the use of scientific and non-scientific values in scientific work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. MARX, WEBER, AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF CAPITALISM.
- Author
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Giddens, Anthony
- Subjects
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CAPITALISM , *CRITICS , *INTELLECTUALS , *LITERATURE , *TRUTHFULNESS & falsehood , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The main object of this paper is to separate several strands in the relationship between the works of Marx and Max Weber. Max Weber has rightly been regarded as Marx's most profound intellectual critic. But there has been much confusion in subsequent literature over the nature and validity of Weber's critique of Marx. This perhaps stems, in part at least, from a failure to distinguish a number of different, although interrelated, themes in Weber's writings. Weber wrote not simply as a critic of Marx, but also in response to the writings and political involvements of the prominent Marxists of his day. Three partially separable aspects of Weber's views thus may be isolated: (a) His attitude towards Marxism in the shape of the main Marxist political agency in Germany, the Social Democratic Party. (b) His views upon the academic contributions of Marxist authors to history and sociology. (c) His views upon what he considered to be Man's own original ideas. These three aspects of Weber's thought may in turn be distinguished from the analytic problem of how far Weber's own understanding of Marx's theory of historical materialism was in fact a valid one. Some of Marx's posthumously published writings, unavailable to Weber, allow us to form a clear judgement on this question. The historical changes in the social and political structure of Germany from the middle to the latter part of the nineteenth century form an essential background to the whole of the paper: Weber's attitudes toward Marx and Marxism cannot be understood out of this context. Weber's work was written not solely in response to a wraith-like "ghost of Marx", but also in response to a force--Marxism--which played a vital political and intellectual role in Imperial Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
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5. SOCIAL RELATIONS AND SOCIAL PERSPECTIVES AMONGST SHIPBUILDING WORKERS--A PRELIMINARY STATEMENT.
- Author
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One, Part
- Subjects
- *
INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL perception , *WORKING class , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper examines the community situation of shipyard workers on Tyneside, certain aspects of their orientations to work and general social perspectives, and the relationship of these to each other and to the structure of social relations at work. In terms of their community situation shipyard workers would seem to come close to Lockwood's traditional proletarian type of worker. There is evidence to suggest, however, that these workers' social perspectives are not at all clearly traditional proletarian. The explanation for this is found, at least m part, m the much greater complexity of social relations at work than are accounted for in the model of traditional proletarianism. The paper suggests that existing typologies of the orientations and social perspectives of workers need to be refined by more detailed studies of the structural and relational aspects of both work and community situations. The paper concludes with a brief examination of changes in both industry and community and the likely effect of these on the social perspectives of shipbuilding workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
6. STRICTLY STRATIFIED SYSTEMS.
- Author
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Fararo, T. J.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL stratification , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL status , *THEORY , *AXIOMS , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper is intended as a contribution to the formal theory of stratification systems. The paper has five sections. In Section I, a method for analytically inducing an order over a multi-dimensional status is discussed. It is believed that such a technique can aid in the specification of conceptual tasks within stratification theory, as well as serve as a baseline in actual measurements. It is subsequently employed in the axiomatic work of Sections 3 and 4. In Section 2, there is a brief discussion of the axiomatic method as a prelude to the system developed in the following two sections. In Section 3, the axioms are stated. In Section 4, various elementary consequences of the axioms are shown; most importantly, various concepts which are intuitively important in stratification theory are shown to be definable (e.g., a class system with a determinate number of classes). Finally, in Section s, there is a concluding discussion of the picture of stratification which emerges within this work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION: INDIVIDUAL ATTRIBUTES AND SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS.
- Author
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Ingham, G. K.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL stratification , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
IN A RECENT paper Mr. Runciman concludes by inviting replies to his argument that it is logically and conceptually useful to employ the tripartite distinction between `class' `status' and `power' in the analysis of social stratification. Mr. Runciman does not, of course, deny the existence of links between these three dimensions, but suggests that such links must be seen contingent empirical relationships and not necessary logical ones. I hope that the following paper will provide such a reply. It must be clear that the following criticism is directed, in the main, to those parts of the paper in which Mr. Runciman is concerned with the logical and conceptual problem. The essay in question also contains a clear and valuable assessment of the problems encountered in any attempt to measure the three types of inequality. In the first part of the paper I propose to give a critical assessment of certain central aspects of Mr. Runciman's argument and, in the second part, I will put forward a very brief formulation of what I consider to be a more meaningful alternative view of the relationships between class, status, and power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
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8. THE SOCIOLOGY OF MEDICINE: VIEWPOINTS AND PERSPECTIVES.
- Author
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Mechanic, David
- Subjects
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SOCIAL medicine , *MEDICAL practice , *HELP-seeking behavior , *DISEASES , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper deals with the organizational context of medical practice, help-seeking, and illness behavior in a manner which attempts to show their relevance to more extensive sociological issues. In the first part of the paper, both the advantages and costs of bureaucratization of medical practice are discussed in relation to changes in society itself. The second part of the paper deals with the strategy for developing a social psychological help-seeking model. Although the entire paper attempts to identify strategic areas for research in medical sociology, the third part of the paper is more specifically directed to needed areas in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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9. DEMONSTRATING THE RATIONALITY OF AN OCCUPATION: The depiction of their occupation by 'Progressive Clergymen'.
- Author
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Moore, Michael
- Subjects
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OCCUPATIONAL sociology , *RATIONALISM , *CLERGY , *SOCIAL settlements , *THEORY of knowledge , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper examines the ways in which language use contributes to the perceived orderliness of social settings. An analysis is made of the accounts made by `progressive' clergymen of their occupations in order to demonstrate the techniques by which the clergymen established, maintained, and legitimated the appropriateness of their occupations. The purpose is to show that the clergymen's very presentation of the facts of their social setting established a context in which what they defined as their occupation became demonstrably rational. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
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10. THE TAKEN-FOR-GRANTED REFERENCE: AN EMPIRICAL EXAMINATION.
- Author
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Thorpe, Ellis
- Subjects
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SOCIAL mobility , *EMPIRICAL research , *HYPOTHESIS , *SOCIAL stratification , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
A common phenomenon in sociology (and in other disciplines presumably) is that of the 'taken_for-granted reference'. This is typically an original empirical study, the findings of which become accepted and thereafter acknowledged as valid evidence in support of argument or for the generation of new hypotheses or counter hypotheses without presentation of critical re-evaluation. The extent to which this occurs and how and why it does occur are largely uninvestigated. In this paper, one case of the taken-for-granted reference, which is widely used in studies of social mobility, is subjected to critical re-evaluation in the light of original empirical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
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11. INTERVIEW TALK: BRINGING OFF A RESEARCH INSTRUMENT.
- Author
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Silverman, David
- Subjects
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INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH , *METHODOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *PERFORMANCE , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Recent attempts to develop symbolic interactionist methodologies have sought to treat the interview as an object of sociological enquiry as well as a research instrument. But their accounts in terms of interactional rules and presentation of selves are primarily concerned with reactions to interviews, and the display of the interview setting in talk is treated as a resource rather than as a topic for investigation. Since such a reliance on the availability of phenomena is also a feature of the `natural attitude', lay and sociological usages of the interview share striking similarities. More specifically, both employ the documentary method of interpretation and, in order to claim a correspondence between theft accounts and some external reality, use remedies to counter misunderstandings. On the basis of tapes of selection interviews, the paper examines the competences and policies routinely adopted to provide for the contexting of talk as interview talk. Given that talk serves to display its setting (this is its reflexive character), talk becomes interview talk as members' managed accomplishment of a knowable context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. UNITS OF SOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS.
- Author
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Shanin, Teodor
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *METHODOLOGY , *CLASS analysis , *SOCIAL classes , *CLASS formation , *TAXONOMY - Abstract
Analytical methodologies assume 'resolution into simple elements' as a necessary preliminary stage of scholarly investigation. They explicitly, or more often implicitly accept, therefore, that the conclusions reached reflect not only the phenomena analysed, but also the applied system of analytical subdivision. The paper explores and compares the main systems of analysis in current sociology: institutional, class and communal. It suggests a taxonomy of analytical systems and a cross-classification which is introduced to throw light on their conceptual properties at the societal as well as the individual level. It proceeds by discussing the issues of: (A) The societal roots of selection of analytical schemes in sociology; (B) The advantages and blind spots of the specific analytical systems; and (C) Attempts at the integration and reduction of analytical systems in contemporary sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
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13. SOME INTRA-REGIONAL VARIATIONS IN EDUCATIONAL PROVISION AND THEIR BEARING UPON EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT-THE CASE OF THE NORTH EAST.
- Author
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Byrne, S. and Williamson, W.
- Subjects
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EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the influence of the policy of local education authorities upon educational attainment. We suggest that the influence of local policy has been neglected in the sociology of education and hypothesize that policy variables are likely to be of major importance as determinants of attainment. Evidence drawn from correlations of policy, provision and social-class variables with each other and with various measures of attainment tends to validate this suggestion, and indicates that two `policy- models' of local authority activity may be appropriate: viz, the elite-orientated authority model, in which resources are differentially concentrated on a sponsored elite with consequent high attainment of this elite; and the egalitarian authority model where resources are more evenly spread throughout the school system with consequent `inferior' attainment of an elitist kind, but where the evidence suggests there is higher overall attainment of the total school system product. It would also appear that the determinant of the policy set pursued by an LEA. is the social class background of the area it covers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. SOCIOLOGY OF KNOWLEDGE: NEW PERSPECTIVES.
- Author
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Elias, Norbert
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY , *HUMANITIES , *SOCIETIES , *IDEOLOGY , *THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
The core problems of sociological and philosophical theories of knowledge remain insoluble and unrelated as long as both theories start from static models. The problems can be solved, and the respective theories related to each other, without undue difficulties if the acquisition of knowledge is conceptualized as a long-term process which takes place within societies also considered as long-term processes. This approach has the added advantage of being in closer agreement with the evidence. The paper indicates what needs to be unlearned and what to be learned in order to prepare the way for such a unified theoretical framework which can serve as a guide to, and which can be in turn corrected by, empirical sociological studies of all types of knowledge, scientific and practical as well as non-scientific or ideological. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
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15. CONTEXTUAL SPECIFICITY, DISCRETION, AND COGNITIVE SOCIALIZATION: WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO LANGUAGE.
- Author
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Henderson, Dorothy
- Subjects
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DISCRETION , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *SOCIOLOGY , *EDUCATION , *COMMUNICATION , *ADULTS - Abstract
The Sociological Research Unit of the Department of Sociology of Education has been engaged for the past five years upon a study of variations between and within social class in familial patterns of communication and control. This paper examines social class differences in maternal reports of various contextual usages of language. The findings, obtained from a sample of 100 mothers, indicate social class differences in adult-adult and mother-child communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. MEASUREMENT IN SOCIOLOGY.
- Author
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Abell, Peter
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *ORDINAL measurement , *GRAPHIC methods , *SIMPLEXES (Mathematics) , *LEVEL of measurement , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This is the second of two papers on measurement models in sociology. The concepts of Ordinal Graph and Ordinal Simplex are elaborated and their applicability to some major theoretical problems outlined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
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17. Social and Emotional Adjustment of Mildly Retarded Children and Adolescents: Critical Review.
- Author
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Gardner, William I.
- Subjects
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BEHAVIOR , *SOCIOLOGY , *EMOTIONS , *DATA analysis , *CHILDREN with intellectual disabilities , *PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *ADOLESCENCE , *BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *SPECIAL education - Abstract
This paper reviews research data concerned with social and emotional adjustment characteristics of mildly retarded children and adolescents. Contrary to a number of statements appearing in various texts and review articles, little is known concerning the type and frequency of occurrence of behavior adjustment problems among the mildly retarded. In addition, there is no suitable evidence to indicate that the adjustment level of special class children is superior to that of retarded children attending regular grades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. ABSTRACTS.
- Subjects
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HEALTH , *HUMAN behavior , *AGING , *DECISION making , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This article presents various abstracts related to the field of human health and behavior. The first one is "Sociological Aspects of Aging," by Howard E. Jensen. The author stresses the disparate, though complimentary, biological and sociological problems of aging. The aging of an individual, as a sociocultural phenomenon, is defined not by physical deterioration or by time but by the value system of his society. The author points out that the simplest part of the sociological problem of aging is to ascertain the objectively determinable physical needs of the aged and to provide for them. The next abstract is "The Sentence Completion Test As a Predictor of Continuation in Psychotherapy," by E. Wesley Hiler. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the Michigan Sentence Completion Test as a predictor of a patient's prematurely terminating therapy. Another abstract is "Decision-Making in a Mental Hospital: Real, Perceived, and Ideal," by Mark Lefton, Simon Dinitz and Benjamin Pasamanick. This paper attempts to examine the decision-making process in a small, institute type of psychiatric hospital in terms of differences in real, perceived and ideal influence patterns of 53 mental health specialists.
- Published
- 1960
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