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2. Call for Papers: Special Issue of Social Psychology Quarterly.
- Published
- 2018
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3. Call for Special Issue Papers.
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- 2015
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4. Who Belongs? How Status Influences the Experience of Gemeinschaft.
- Author
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Beckwith, Cary
- Subjects
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GEMEINSCHAFT & Gesellschaft (Sociology) , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIAL belonging , *SOCIAL groups , *GROUP identity - Abstract
Belonging is a central human aspiration, one that has drawn attention from sociologists and social psychologists alike. Who is likely to realize this aspiration? This paper addresses that question by examining how "we-feeling"—the experience of gemeinschaft—is distributed within small groups. Previous research has argued that the feeling of belonging is positively related to a person's social status through a cumulative advantage process. But high status can recast the responsibilities of group life as burdens if a person regards them as incongruent with his or her rank, and this can dim one's feelings toward the group. This paper proposes that a "high-status penalty" diminishes we-feeling for high-ranking individuals, thereby concentrating we-feeling in the middle of a status hierarchy. It tests this theory using data from the Urban Communes Project, a survey of 60 naturally occurring communities. The findings suggest that status-incongruent responsibilities can suppress the benefits of status at the top of a hierarchy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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5. Transparency and Embodied Action: Turn Organization and Fairness in Complex Institutional Environments.
- Author
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Heath, Christian and Mondada, Lorenza
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INSTITUTIONAL environment , *ART auctions , *COMPLEX organizations , *CONVERSATION analysis , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Institutional settings in which large numbers of participants have the right and in some cases the responsibility to contribute to the proceedings pose particular challenges to the order and allocation of turns. These challenges are organizational, how to enable and order participation between large numbers of people, as well as moral and political—the fair, transparent, and even distribution of access to the floor. In this paper, we address two very different institutional settings—one political and the other economic—and consider how participants are provided opportunities to contribute to the proceedings in a fair and transparent manner. Drawing on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, we examine the systematic management of turn allocation and demonstrate how multimodality is critical to understanding how particular institutions achieve their principal aims and outcomes. This study is based on the analysis of a substantial corpus of video recordings of public consultations concerned with the discussion of major public and private sector initiatives and auctions of fine art and antiques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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6. Go to More Parties? Social Occasions as Home to Unexpected Turning Points in Life Trajectories.
- Author
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Goffman, Alice
- Subjects
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LIFE course approach , *LIFE - Abstract
Reviving classical attention to gathering times as sites of transformation and building on more recent microsociological work, this paper uses qualitative data to show how social occasions open up unexpected bursts of change in the lives of those attending. They do this by pulling people into a special realm apart from normal life, generating collective effervescence and emotional energy, bringing usually disparate people together, forcing public rankings, and requiring complex choreography, all of which combine to make occasions sites of inspiration and connection as well as sites of offense and violation. Rather than a time out from "real" life, social occasions hold an outsized potential to unexpectedly shift the course that real life takes. Implications for microsociology, social inequality, and the life course are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Exchange, Identity Verification, and Social Bonds.
- Author
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Stets, Jan E., Burke, Peter J., and Savage, Scott V.
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SOCIAL exchange , *IDENTIFICATION , *SOCIAL bonds , *FAIRNESS , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Although evidence reveals that the social exchange process and identity verification process each can produce social bonds, researchers have yet to examine their conjoined effects. In this paper, we consider how exchange processes and identity processes separately and jointly shape the social bonds that emerge between actors. We do this with data from an experiment that introduces the fairness person identity (how people define themselves in terms of fairness) in a negotiated exchange context. The findings reveal how both exchange and identity processes operate in an independent as well as contingent manner to influence the development of social cohesion at the micro level. The contingent nature of the results suggests both exchange and identity theories need to be modified to account for these contingencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Samuel Stouffer and Relative Deprivation.
- Author
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Pettigrew, Thomas F.
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SOCIAL psychology , *PROBABILITY theory , *SOCIAL surveys , *RELATIVE deprivation , *SOCIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
This paper first offers a tribute to Samuel Stouffer (1900–1960), a major contributor to social psychology. He helped to establish probability surveys as a useful method for social science, led three major studies at midcentury, and introduced important new concepts and statistical methods. Thus, both conceptually and methodologically, he shaped modern social psychology. Second, the paper revitalizes Stouffer’s most famous concept—relative deprivation. A new meta-analysis demonstrates that relative deprivation predicts a wide range of important outcomes, so long as it measures resentment with data from individuals and is paired with dependent variables of similar scope. Unfortunately, sociology largely abandoned the concept because it failed to meet the overstated early claims made for it in the collective protest domain. The history of this use and disuse of relative deprivation is summarized and critiqued. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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9. Reviewer Acknowledgments.
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PSYCHOLOGY , *EDITORIAL boards - Abstract
The continued success of peer-reviewed journals depends upon the contributions of anonymous, but dedicated, researchers who provide constructive feedback on submissions. These reviewers give freely of their time and expertise and, in so doing, play a major role in making I Social Psychology Quarterly i a success. In compensation all we can offer is our heartfelt thanks to the exceptional people who served as reviewers on one or more manuscripts between September 1, 2018, and August 31, 2019. We especially want to thank our deputy editors, who provide invaluable guidance, and the members of our editorial board, who not only help to steer the journal, but also provide at least one review on every paper that we examine; we have designated members of the editorial board and the deputy editors with an asterisk. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2019
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10. Do You See What I See? Testing for Individual Differences in Impressions of Events.
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Rogers, Kimberly B.
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INDIVIDUAL differences , *SOCIAL action , *IMPRESSION formation (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY & culture , *AMERICAN English language , *CONTROL theory (Sociology) , *GENDER differences (Sociology) , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
Affect control theory shows how cultural meanings for identities and behavior are used to form impressions of events and guide social action. In this research, I examine whether members of the same culture tend to process social events in the same way, with a focus on U.S. English speakers. I find widespread consensus in the mechanisms of impression formation, particularly for judgments of evaluation (goodness, esteem), but also find sufficient individual differences to warrant further study for models of potency (power, dominance) and object impressions (feelings about the target of a behavior). Findings support long-standing claims that members of U.S. English language culture, especially cultural experts, tend to process social events in the same way. However, I find no significant gender differences in event processing. Iclose the paper by estimating and interpreting new impression change equations using methodological techniques appropriate to the degree of consensus found for each model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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11. The Micropolitics of Legitimacy.
- Author
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Clayman, Steven E.
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ILLEGITIMACY , *PRESS conferences , *CONVERSATION analysis , *BROADCAST journalism , *POLITICIANS - Abstract
When journalists elicit opinion and policy pronouncements from politicians, this engages a two-dimensional struggle over (1) where the politician stands on the issue in question and (2) the legitimacy of that position. Using data drawn from broadcast news interviews and news conferences, this paper anatomizes the key features of political positioning questions and their responses, and documents a tension surrounding relatively marginal or extreme views that tend to be treated cautiously by politicians but are pursued vigorously by journalists. The findings shed light on how politicians balance appeals to centrist and partisan viewers, how journalists police the boundaries of mainstream politics, and how both parties contribute to a process of legitimation that enacts and at times modifies the parameters of the sociopolitical mainstream. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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12. Escaping Embarrassment: Face-work in the Rap Cipher.
- Author
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Lee, Jooyoung
- Subjects
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EMBARRASSMENT , *SELF-consciousness (Sensitivity) , *RAP music , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL interaction , *PSYCHOLOGY ,HUMAN behavior research - Abstract
How do individuals escape embarrassing moments in interaction? Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork, in-depth interviews, and video recordings of weekly street corner ciphers (impromptu rap sessions), this paper expands Goffman's theory of defensive and protective face-work. The findings reveal formulaic and indirect dimensions of face-work. First, this paper shows how individuals use prescripted techniques and other canned resources to overcome embarrassing gaffes in interaction. Specifically, rappers use “writtens” (prewritten rhymes) when they are close to “falling off,” a local term for messing up and stopping abruptly during a “freestyle” (improvised) rap performance. Second, this paper describes how shared pressures to sustain an interaction can lead to collateral face-saving. In the cipher, surrounding peers “jump in” and begin rapping when somebody else falls off. Although this protects the person who is falling off from embarrassment, it is often done to “keep the flow going” in the cipher. At the end, this paper also outlines situations in which individuals withhold face protection from others. These findings point to other social situations in which individuals escape embarrassment with canned resources and through collateral face-saving. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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13. Embodied Self-reflexivity.
- Author
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Pagis, Michal
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REFLEXIVITY , *SENSES , *EDUCATORS , *YOGA , *VIPASYANA (Buddhism) , *SELF-perception , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RELIGION - Abstract
Drawing on G. H. Mead and Merleau-Ponty, this paper aims to extend our understanding of self-reflexivity beyond the notion of a discursive, abstract, and symbolic process. It offers a framework for embodied self-reflexivity, which anchors the self in the reflexive capacity of bodily sensations. The data consist of two years of ethnographic observations and in-depth interviews of vipassana meditation practitioners in Israel and the United States. The findings illustrate how bodily sensations are used as indexes to psychological states, emotions, and past experiences, while constant awareness of embodied responses is used as a tool for self-monitoring. The paper follows the interaction between discursive and embodied modes of reflexivity and the attempt to shift from one mode to the other. I suggest that currently popular practices of embodied awareness, from meditation to yoga, are based on embodied self-reflexivity and are part of the postindustrial culture of self-awareness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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14. How do We Learn to Trust? A Confirmatory Tetrad Analysis of the Sources of Generalized Trust.
- Author
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Glanville, Jennifer L. and Paxton, Pamela
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SOCIAL aspects of trust , *EXPERIENCE , *SOCIAL psychology research , *INTERPERSONAL relations & psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research - Abstract
In this paper we ask whether individuals decide that people are generally trustworthy or untrustworthy by extrapolating from their experiences in localized interactions or whether a more fixed predisposition drives assessments of trustworthiness. These two contrasting theoretical perspectives on generalized trust can be translated into empirically testable models and adjudicated using confirmatory tetrad analysis. This paper is among the first substantive applications of confirmatory tetrad analysis and illustrates an important advantage of this technique—the ability to distinguish between causal and reflective indicators of a latent variable. We find that individuals develop a generalized expectation of trustworthiness based on their experiences with different groups of people in localized settings. We demonstrate the robustness of our results across disparate samples and spatially dissimilar survey sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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15. Egocentric Bias or Information Management? Selective Disclosure and the Social Roots of Norm Misperception.
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Kitts, James A.
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PREJUDICES , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL norms , *SOCIAL networks , *INFERENCE (Logic) , *SOCIAL perception - Abstract
This paper reports on biases in group members' inferences about collective support for group norms. Whereas theories of "looking glass perception" suggest a tendency to project our own preferences onto others, this paper shows that observed biases simply may reflect flows of information through social networks. Members conceal counternormative behavior and disclose it selectively within confidence relations. This process yields structured inference, in which members' inferences depend on their social ties, and also pluralistic ignorance, in which members generally overestimate collective support for existing norms. These predictions are evaluated in a field study of perceived normative consensus in five vegetarian housing cooperatives. Results fail to support the "intrinsic bias" argument, but demonstrate these forms of "information bias." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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16. Collective Action and Power Inequality: Coalitions in Exchange Networks.
- Author
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Simpson, Brent and Macy, Michael W.
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COLLECTIVE action , *SOCIAL action , *SOCIAL exchange , *COALITIONS , *POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
This paper integrates research in network exchange and collective action. Network exchange research typically assumes that structurally disadvantaged actors cannot collude. Meanwhile, collective action research shows that cooperation can be undermined by the temptation to "free-ride" on others' efforts. In this paper we extend the scope of network exchange theory by allowing low-power actors to form coalitions. We also extend game-theoretic research by embedding collective action in a network of social relations and power processes. A theory of coalitions in exchange networks is presented, which predicts the critical mass below which coalitions fail to affect power inequality and above which coalitions become unstable. We present the results of a preliminary experimental test of the theory. The results demonstrate not only that coalitions form but even that they can reverse power inequality. However, larger coalitions were more stable than predicted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
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17. The Past, Present, and Future of an Identity Theory.
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Stryker, Sheldon and Burke, Peter J.
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IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL psychology , *SELF - Abstract
Among the many traditions of research on "identity," two somewhat different yet strongly related strands of identity theory have developed. The first, reflected in the work of Stryker and colleagues, focuses on the linkages of social structures with identities. The second, reflected in the work of Burke and colleagues, focuses on the internal process of self-verification. In the present paper we review each of these strands and then discuss ways in which the two relate to and complement one another. Each provides a context for the other: the relation of social structures to identities influences the process of self-verification, while the process of self-verification creates and sustains social structures. The paper concludes with examples of potentially useful applications of identity theory to other arenas of social psychology, and with a discussion of challenges that identity theory must meet to provide a clear understanding of the relation between self and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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18. Poverty Attributions and the Perceived Justice of Income Inequality.
- Author
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Schneider, Simone M. and Castillo, Juan C.
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INCOME distribution -- Social aspects , *SOCIAL justice , *POVERTY & society , *ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
Though the concept of social justice is widely used in the social sciences, we know little about the amount of income inequality that is perceived as just and why perceptions vary across social contexts. In this paper, we argue the ways people define the causes of poverty are related to how they perceive and justify existing income inequality. We examine internal and external attributions of poverty using survey data from the 2006 International Social Justice Project (ISJP). We compare two culturally and structurally distinct regions—East and West Germany. The results support our hypothesis that the amount of income inequality people perceive as just is related to how they explain the causes of poverty, that is, internal and/or external attributions. Poverty attributions are crucial mediators and explain contextual differences in the perceived justice of income inequality between East and West Germany. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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19. Gender, Interaction, and Delinquency: Testing a Theory of Differential Social Control.
- Author
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Heimer, Karen
- Subjects
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JUVENILE delinquency , *SYMBOLIC interactionism , *SOCIAL interaction , *REFERENCE groups , *YOUTH ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
This paper develops an interactionist explanation of gender differences in the processes leading to juvenile delinquency. Drawing on principles of symbolic interactionism and on research on gender differences in interactions, the paper specifies a theoretical model that generates predictions about similarities and differences across gender in the relationships between commitment to reference groups, role-taking, and delinquency. It then tests hypotheses using data from a national sample of youths, and finds that an interactionist theory of delinquency is supported for both females and males. The findings also show gender differences in the role-taking process leading to delinquency; indeed, these findings suggest an important difference in the process by which group social controls are transformed into self-control in delinquent situations among girls as compared with boys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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20. A Working Conceptualization of Social Structure: Mertonian Roots and Psychological and Sociocultural Relationships.
- Author
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Schooler, Carmi
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SOCIAL structure , *SOCIOLOGY , *CULTURE , *SOCIAL change , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
Using a small set of interlocking definitions, this paper presents a generally applicable conceptualization of social structure developed from recollections of Merton's late-1950s formulation. A brief review of the literature supports the view that the proposed conceptualization provides sociological researchers with a relatively simple and logically consistent overall framework, generally continuous with past theorizing, in which to place their own findings. The paper pays particular attention to how social structures are related causally and epistemologically to more micro-level psychological and more macrolevel sociocultural phenomena. Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence suggest a decrease in the likelihood and speed of change as we move from psychological- to social structural- to sociocultural-level phenomena. Although they require proof in each instance, these postulated differences in the relative speed with which psychological-, social structural-, and sociocultural-level phenomena tend to affect each other provide a new and potentially useful tool for unraveling the knotted causal connections among these different-level phenomena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
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21. Shyness, Self-Confidence, and Social Interaction.
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Manning, Philip and Ray, George
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SELF-confidence , *BASHFULNESS , *EMOTIONS , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper describes the behavior of shy and self-confident individuals. Although there is a literature concerning the causes and consequences of shyness and self-confidence, nobody has systematically investigated what such people actually do. This paper reports findings obtained in a laboratory about conversational strategies used by shy and self-confident men and women. Participants were chosen from introductory courses at a midwestern university and were asked to complete the Personal Report of Communication Apprehension (PRCA) questionnaire. Those with either high or low scores then were asked to participate in a laboratory experiment in which dyads "got to know each other." These interactions were audio- and videotaped. Through conversation-analytic techniques, verbal patterns of both shy and self-confident behavior were identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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22. Social Structure and the Individual: Emerging Themes and New Directions.
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House, James S. and Mortimer, Jeylan
- Subjects
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SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL stratification , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *FAMILY-work relationship , *PERSONALITY - Abstract
By bringing together a set of papers in the broad social structure and personality tradition of social psychology, this issue of SPQ seeks to manifest its centrality to social psychology, and vice versa. The papers illustrate the utility and necessity of incorporating more careful and more explicit analyses of macrosocial and psychological processes into the study of the relationships of macrosocial structures and processes to the thoughts, feelings, and behavior of individual actors. Relationships between social stratification (by socioeconomic, gender, racial/ethnic, or age status) and the individual and intersections between the domains of work and family emerge as central problems in the study of social structure and personality, and of social psychology, sociology, and psychology more generally. These and other analyses could benefit from increased interplay among the different faces or branches of social psychology and of social psychology with emerging developments in the parent disciplines. The reemergence of the study of personality in psychology, especially from a cognitive perspective, the new concern of sociology with micro-macro links, increased intersections of biology with sociology and psychology, and the increased use of life course perspectives and longitudinal data in psychology and sociology are all developments that could contribute to, and benefit from, future advances in the study of social structure and personality. Each of these trends suggest the need for more attention to the interrelationships between individuals and macrosocial structures or processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
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23. Informal Networks and Organizational Crises: An Experimental Simulation.
- Author
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Krackhardt, David and Stern, Robert N.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
This paper argues that organizations with a particular social network structure are more effective than most organizations in responding to crises. Further, it is argued that the effective structure does not occur naturally, but must be designed consciously and carefully. A theory is developed based on well-founded principles of social science, most notably work on formal structure, conflict, friendships, and organizational crises. The paper concludes with an experimental test of one of the four propositions deduced from the theory. Six trials of the experiment found significant support for this proposition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
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24. Social Psychological Implications of Voice Frequency Correlations: Analyzing Conversation Partner Adaptation by Computer.
- Author
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Gregory, Stanford W. and Jr.
- Subjects
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ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *SOCIAL psychology , *ORAL communication , *CONVERSATION , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *SOCIOLINGUISTICS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Several earlier papers have discussed the results of a technique for analyzing paralinguistic adaptation of partners in conversation. The previous research showed that in a group of eleven tape-recorded dyadic conversations, where the actual conversation partners have been separated and then scrambled together, a set of computer routines is capable of re-matching a digitized version of the actual conversation partners through an analysis of voice frequency levels. In another paper based upon the same data set and making use of the same techniques of analysis, it was found that the adaptation phenomenon is also capable of quantitatively and objectively selecting out from a scrambled sample of group and non-group members, specific conversations associated with persons who share membership in a consolidated group. Members of a consolidated group in comparison with desparate individuals engage in a kind of paralinguistic crpto-communication constituting a code signifying their membership. These sociolinguistic techniques present innovative new ways of researching a multitude of general social psychological areas such as conversational affectivity, conflict and effectiveness, which obviously specifically influence social interaction between patient and therapist, non-native speakers and native speakers, salespeople and customers, professional interviewers and subjects, as well as a multitude of other diverse applications. Though ideas dealt with here are nor difficult to understand, some of the techniques used are less accessible. This paper explicitly sets forth methods used in this type of research in a less technical manner, in an effort to make techniques more accessible to the social psychological researcher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
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25. The Inconsistent Curriculum: Cultural Tool Kits and Student Interpretations of Ambiguous Expectations.
- Author
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Calarco, Jessica McCrory
- Subjects
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CURRICULUM , *EQUALITY , *CULTURE , *AMBIGUITY , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *WORKING class , *MIDDLE class , *EXPECTATION (Psychology) , *HELP-seeking behavior , *TEACHER attitudes , *ATTITUDES toward entitlement , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
This paper argues that inequalities can be more clearly understood by combining tool kit theories of culture that stress convergence between institutional expectations and individual behavior with symbolic interactionism, which emphasizes the interpretive and situational nature of behavior. I base these arguments on an ethnographic analysis of student responses to ambiguous expectations around help-seeking. Teachers’ shifting expectations created interpretive moments, to which middle-class and working-class students responded differently. Through a logic of entitlement, middle-class students saw ambiguities as opportunities for reward and tried to seek assistance. Through a logic of appeasement, working-class students saw ambiguities as opportunities for reprimand and sought to placate teachers by avoiding requests. Teacher responses to student behavior varied across situations but helped to perpetuate inequalities. Such findings suggest that the activation of tool kit resources and the stratified profits that result are more interpretive and situational than scholars typically acknowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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26. Playing the (Sexual) Field: The Interactional Basis of Systems of Sexual Stratification.
- Author
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Green, Adam Isaiah
- Subjects
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SMALL group research , *GENDER inequality , *SELF-perception , *SYMBOLIC interactionism , *GAY people's sexual behavior , *LESBIANS' sexual behavior , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Recently, scholars have used a Bourdieusian theory of practice to analyze systems of sexual stratification, including an examination of sexual fields and sexual (or erotic) capital. While the broad structural features of the sexual field have been a point of focus in this latter research, a systematic analysis of the interactional processes that operate within the sexual status order has not been performed. In this paper, drawing on original data from an urban gay enclave, I identify six key interactional processes that occur within sexual fields, including: 1) actors’ recognition that the sexual field is constituted by a set of relations anchored to competition and sexual selection; 2) the perception of a generalized other (Mead 1934) within the field, including knowledge concerning a given field’s collective valuations of sexual attractiveness; 3) a formulation of one’s own position within the sexual status order vis-à-vis intersubjective feedback and the development of a looking-glass self (Cooley 1902); 4) an assessment of others’ positions within the sexual status order; 5) knowledge of “the game” (Goffman 1959)—including how to conduct a successful self-performance (ibid.), the construction of an optimizing front (ibid.) and proper field-specific demeanor (Goffman 1967); and finally, ideally, 6) the ability to “save face.” In total, these interactional processes draw from and reproduce systems of sexual stratification, and are likely to generalize across sexual fields. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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27. Spoiled Group Identities and Backstage Work: A Theory of Stigma Management Rehearsals.
- Author
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O’Brien, John
- Subjects
- *
SOCIALIZATION research , *MUSLIM teenagers , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *SOCIAL stigma , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *MUSLIM Americans - Abstract
How do persons with a stigmatized identity learn potential responses to discrimination and harassment? Drawing on three and a half years of ethnographic data, this paper demonstrates how members of a group of Muslim American youth are socialized in locally dominant stigma management strategies through stigma management rehearsals. Stigma management rehearsals are small group interactions through which leaders and members encourage their peers to adopt normative stigma responses. I identify two rehearsal types that vary in their socializing function as well as in their temporal orientation toward stigmatizing incidents. In direct preparation rehearsals, individuals anticipating a stigmatizing encounter are quickly taught the normative response. In deep education rehearsals, stigmatizing incidents set in the past or hypothetical future are used to teach justifications underlying local responses and to allow for the private expression of publicly inappropriate responses. These findings suggest that intragroup dynamics and backstage processes are important considerations when investigating issues of stigma and stigma management. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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28. Designing the Recipient: Managing Advice Resistance in Institutional Settings.
- Author
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Hepburn, Alexa and Potter, Jonathan
- Subjects
- *
DISCURSIVE psychology , *HELPLINES , *CHILD protection services , *CONVERSATION analysis , *COMMUNICATION in human services - Abstract
In this paper we consider a collection of conversational practices that arise when a professional is faced with extended resistance to their offered advice. Our data is comprised of telephone calls to a UK child protection helpline. The practices we identify occur repeatedly across our corpus of advice resistance sequences and involve (1) the repackaging of resisted advice in more idiomatic form; (2) the combination of that advice with a tag question that treats the client as able to confirm the reformulated version despite their prior resistance to it; and (3) the dampening of the response requirement by continuing past the tag question, which would normally constitute a transition place for the advice recipient. We also discuss the tension between the contrasting projects of callers and call takers, which can lead to both delivery of advice and the resistance of that advice. In doing this we highlight the way in which advice may function as an element of broader institutional practices. In specifying these practices we draw upon analytic tools employed by conversation analysts, including various features of sequence organization (Schegloff 2007) and turn design (Sacks, Schegloff, and Jefferson 1974). The analysis is intended to contribute to three main areas of research: to the applied topic of managing advice resistance, to the growing literature on understanding institutional practices, and to broader concerns in conversation analytic and discursive psychological literature. These concerns include the status of the “psychological” in interaction and the specification of actions across turns and sequences of talk. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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29. Coming Out as Fat: Rethinking Stigma.
- Author
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Saguy, Abigail C. and Ward, Anna
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL stigma , *SELF-disclosure , *OVERWEIGHT persons , *COMING out (Sexual orientation) , *SOCIAL change , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) - Abstract
This paper examines the surprising case of women who ‘‘come out as fat’’ to test and refine theories about social change, social mobilization, stigma, and stigma resistance. First, supporting theories about ‘‘social movement spillover,’’ we find that overlapping memberships in queer and fat activist groups, as well as networks between these groups, have facilitated the migration of this cultural narrative. Second, we find that the different, embodied context of body size and sexual orientation leads to changes in meaning as this narrative travels. Specifically, the hyper-visibility of fat changes what it means to come out as a fat person, compared to what it means to come out as gay or lesbian. Third, this case leads us to question the importance of the distinction made in the literatures on stigma and on social movements between assimilationist strategies that stress sameness, on the one hand, and radical political strategies that emphasize difference, on the other. Finally, this case suggests that the extent to which a stigmatized trait is associated with membership in a social group—with its own practices, values, and norms— shapes what it means to ‘‘come out’’ as one who possesses that trait. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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30. Advice-implicative Interrogatives: Building ‘‘Client-centered’’ Support in a Children’s Helpline.
- Author
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Butler, Carly W., Potter, Jonathan, Danby, Susan, Emmison, Michael, and Hepburn, Alexa
- Subjects
- *
HELPLINES , *HOTLINES (Counseling) , *COUNSELOR-client communication , *COUNSELOR-client relationship , *COUNSELING research , *CLIENT-centered psychotherapy - Abstract
Interactional research on advice giving has described advice as normative and asymmetric. In this paper we examine how these dimensions of advice are softened by counselors on a helpline for children and young people through the use of questions. Through what we term ‘‘adviceimplicative interrogatives,’’ counselors ask clients about the relevance or applicability of a possible future course of action. The allusion to this possible action by the counselor identifies it as normatively relevant, and displays the counselor’s epistemic authority in relation to dealing with a client’s problems. However, the interrogative format mitigates the normative and asymmetric dimensions typical of advice sequences by orienting to the client’s epistemic authority in relation to their own lives, and delivering advice in a way that is contingent upon the client’s accounts of their experiences, capacities, and understandings. The demonstration of the use of questions in advice sequences offers an interactional specification of the ‘‘client-centered’’ support that is characteristic of prevailing counseling practice. More specifically, it shows how the values of empowerment and child-centered practice, which underpin services such as Kids Helpline, are embodied in specific interactional devices. Detailed descriptions of this interactional practice offer fresh insights into the use of interrogatives in counseling contexts, and provide practitioners with new ways of thinking about, and discussing, their current practices. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Do You See What I Am? How Observers’ Backgrounds Affect Their Perceptions of Multiracial Faces.
- Author
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Herman, Melissa R.
- Subjects
- *
MULTIRACIAL people , *RACE identity , *MULTIRACIALITY , *RACE relations , *YOUTH - Abstract
Although race is one of the most salient status characteristics in American society, many observers cannot distinguish the racial ancestries of multiracial youth. This paper examines how people perceive multiracial adolescents: specifically, I investigate whether observers perceive the adolescents as multiracial and whether these racial perceptions are congruent with the multiracial adolescents’ self-identifications. Results show that 1) observers perceived close to half of multiracial targets as monoracial, 2) multiracial targets who identified themselves as black were nearly always perceived as black but not always as multiracial, and 3) the demographic and environmental characteristics of observers had no bearing on the congruence of their racial perceptions. That is, regardless of their own demographic characteristics or exposure to people of other races, observers were more congruent when examining targets who self-identified as black or white and less congruent when identifying targets from Asian, Hispanic, American Indian, or Middle Eastern backgrounds. Despite the demographic trend toward multiracialism in the United States, observers’ perceptions may maintain the status quo in race relations: a black-white dichotomy where part-blacks remain in the collective black category. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Estimating Risk: Stereotype Amplification and the Perceived Risk of Criminal Victimization.
- Author
-
Quillian, Lincoln and Pager, Devah
- Subjects
- *
CRIME victims , *RISK assessment , *SOCIAL context , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *CRIME & race , *STEREOTYPES , *RACE discrimination , *SURVEYS - Abstract
This paper considers the process by which individuals estimate the risk of adverse events, with particular attention to the social context in which risk estimates are formed. We compare subjective probability estimates of crime victimization to actual victimization experiences among respondents from the 1994 to 2002 waves of the Survey of Economic Expectations (Dominitz and Manski 2002). Using zip code identifiers, we then match these survey data to local area characteristics from the census. The results show that: (1) the risk of criminal victimization is significantly overestimated relative to actual rates of victimization or other negative events; (2) neighborhood racial composition is strongly associated with perceived risk of victimization, whereas actual victimization risk is driven by nonracial neighborhood characteristics; and (3) white respondents appear more strongly affected by racial composition than nonwhites in forming their estimates of risk. We argue these results support a model of stereotype amplification in the formation of risk estimates. Implications for persistent racial inequality are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. “Categorizing the Categorizer”: The Management of Racial Common Sense in Interaction.
- Author
-
Whitehead, Kevin A.
- Subjects
- *
RACE awareness , *ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY , *RACIAL & ethnic attitudes , *RACE relations , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *CONVERSATION analysis - Abstract
In this paper, I consider one mechanism by which racial categories, racial “common sense,” and thus the social organization of race itself, are reproduced in interaction. I approach these issues by using an ethnomethodological, conversation analytic approach to analyze a range of practices employed by participants of a “race-training” workshop. These practices manage the normative accountability involved in referring to the racial categories of others when describing their actions, and thus in using racial common sense in talk-in-interaction. This accountability arises in part because a speaker's use of a racial category to explain someone else's actions may provide a warranted basis for recipients to treat the speaker's own racial category as relevant for understanding and assessing the speaker's actions. I describe three main ways in which speakers can manage this accountability, namely generalizing race, localizing race, and alluding to race. My analysis shows that, even in attempting to resist racial common sense in accounting for their own actions and those of others, speakers orient to race as a normative framework according to which individuals will produce their own actions and interpret those of others, and thus reproduce it as relevant for understanding social action. This research contributes to advancing knowledge in the fields of ethnomethodology, conversation analysis, racial studies, and categorical inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Structural Implications of Reciprocal Exchange: A Power-Dependence Approach.
- Author
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Bonacich, Phillip and Bienenstock, Elisa Jayne
- Subjects
- *
RECIPROCITY (Psychology) , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *DEPENDENCY (Psychology) , *REWARD (Psychology) , *CHOICE (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper presents and tests a general model to predict emergent exchange patterns and power differences in reciprocal exchange networks when individual actors follow the norm of reciprocity. With an interesting qualification, the experimental results reported here support the power-dependence approach (Emerson 1972a, b): those who acquire the most resources are connected to others who are dependent on them for rewards. Although, as Molm has abundantly demonstrated (1999, 2000, 2001, 2007), the quality of the relationship in negotiated and reciprocal exchange networks is quite different, and the details of a general model of network exchange might well differ for negotiated and reciprocal exchange, experimental results presented here indicate that power in networks, no matter how complex, is linked to dependence regardless of whether actors are motivated by rational choice or a norm of reciprocity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Formation and Stabilization of Vertical Hierarchies among Adolescents: Towards a Quantitative Ethology of Dominance among Humans.
- Author
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Martin, John Levi
- Subjects
- *
BEHAVIORAL research , *SOCIAL dominance , *COMPARATIVE psychology , *TEENAGE boys -- Psychology , *SAME-sex relationships , *BEHAVIORAL assessment of teenagers , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Social psychological investigations of hierarchy formation have been almost entirely confined to the case of task-oriented groups and hence have produced theories that turn on the existence of such a task. But other forms of vertical hierarchy may emerge in non-task groups. One form, orderings of dominance, has been studied among animals using systematic behavioral observations, but almost never among humans, despite many discussions of such structures existing among adolescent males. Using stochastic models, this paper examines change in vertical orderings for data on dominance encounters among same-sex adolescent campers. There seem to be different paths for stabilization of vertical hierarchies for boys and girls, both of which involve the emergence of special roles, the top boy or the bottom girl. Further, stabilization seems to be greatly facilitated (at least for boys) by members adopting Roger Gould's theory of dominance encounters and turning their attention to those close in rank. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Sympathy and Social Order.
- Author
-
Irwin, Kyle, McGrimmon, Tucker, and Simpson, Brent
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL order , *SYMPATHY , *SELF-interest , *SOCIAL values , *SOCIAL problems , *FORECASTING - Abstract
Social order is possible only if individuals forgo the narrow pursuit of self-interest for the greater good. For over a century, social scientists have argued that sympathy mitigates self-interest and recent empirical work supports this claim. Much less is known about why actors experience sympathy in the first place, particularly in fleeting interactions with strangers, where cooperation is especially uncertain. We argue that perceived interdependence increases sympathy towards strangers. Results from our first study, a vignette experiment, support this claim and suggests a situational solution to social dilemmas. Meanwhile, previous work points to two strong individual-level predictors of cooperation: generalized trust and social values. In Study Two we address the intersection of situational and individual-level explanations to ask: does situational sympathy mediate these individual-level predictors of cooperation? Results from the second study, a laboratory experiment, support our hypotheses that sympathy mediates the generalized trust–cooperation link and the relationship between social values and cooperation. The paper concludes with a discussion of limitations of the present work and directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Passion Work: The Joint Production of Emotional Labor in Professional Wrestling.
- Author
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Smith, R. Tyson
- Subjects
- *
EMOTIONAL labor , *PROFESSIONAL wrestling , *PROFESSIONAL wrestlers , *FANATICISM , *SOCIOLOGY of sports , *SOCIOLOGY of emotions - Abstract
This paper presents a case of jointly produced passion work. Passion work is emotional labor designed to elicit a strong response from subjects through an impression of extreme states such as pain, agony, or suffering. Based on an ethnographic investigation of professional wrestling participants, this study analyzes the backstage emotion teamwork that takes place within the self and with other performers. The study traces how performers do this physical labor and the social consequences of such work. The findings demonstrate that a) social rewards are intrinsic to performances of passion work, b) jointly produced passion work allows for the sort of breadth that is difficult to achieve in solo emotional work, and c) emotional labor shapes identity in recreational performances of the body. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Sex, Society, and Association: A Cross-national Examination of Status Construction Theory.
- Author
-
Brashears, Matthew E.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL status , *PERSONALITY & social intelligence , *PERSONALITY studies , *SOCIAL psychology research , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Status construction theory (SCT) has established a set of sufficient conditions for the formation of status characteristics that define informal hierarchies. However, while it has proven successful in explaining the development of status-laden personal characteristics in the laboratory, relatively less attention has been devoted to its predictions at the societal level. This paper alters the current state of affairs by examining the predictions of status construction theory using the 2001 International Social Survey Program's networks module. This data source allows the comparison of a macro-level distribution of a goal object (authority positions) with a novel measure of status derived from the social networks literature. The results are consistent with the predictions of SCT, supporting the theory outside the laboratory and cross-nationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Mastery and the Fulfillment of Occupational Expectations by Midlife.
- Author
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Reynolds, John R., Burge, Stephanie Woodham, Robbins, Cheryl L., Boyd, Emily M., and Harris, Brandy
- Subjects
- *
MASTERY learning , *AIMS & objectives of training , *SOCIAL aspects of work environments , *WOMEN'S employment , *PROFESSIONAL employees , *PARENT-child relationships & society , *SOCIAL conditions of women ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper tests the central tenet of social psychology and the life-course perspective that broader contexts of opportunity and constraint moderate the ability of individuals to act on their plans and ambitions. We use the 1972 National Longitudinal Study to assess the impact of mastery on achieving one's occupational expectations and to determine if the benefits of mastery are contingent on structural contexts. Three types of structural constraints are examined: local employment conditions, marriage and family, and the credentialing of upper-status occupations. In general, mastery is associated with more ambitious and stable expectations over time. Results from discrete-time event history models show that personal mastery is positively associated with achieving one's occupational expectations, and the association is contingent on some, but not all, structural constraints. Marriage increases the effect of mastery on the odds of achieving one's occupational expectations, but having children decreases mastery's effect. Mastery is more beneficial to those pursuing training-intensive occupations, partly due to the acquisition of post-secondary credentials. Lastly, women receive less of a benefit from mastery than men do, likely due to the structural barriers women face in the workplace. Contrary to expectations, poor local employment conditions do not weaken mastery's influence on goal attainment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Can Legal Interventions Change Beliefs? The Effect of Exposure to Sexual Harassment Policy on Men's Gender Beliefs.
- Author
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Tinkler, Justine Eatenson, Li, Yan E., and Mollborn, Stefanie
- Subjects
- *
SEXUAL harassment , *GENDER inequality , *MAN-woman relationships , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *SOCIAL status , *WORK environment - Abstract
In spite of the relative success of equal opportunity laws on women's status in the workplace, we know little about the influence of such legal interventions on people's attitudes and beliefs. This paper focuses, in particular, on how sexual harassment policy affects men's beliefs about the gender hierarchy. We employ an experimental design in which we measure the effect of a policy intervention on men's explicit and implicit gender beliefs. Results show that the sexual harassment policy did not alter explicit gender beliefs. Explicit beliefs changed in a different way, however. Compared to the baseline condition, participants in the policy intervention condition believed that most people think both men and women are lower-status, less competent, and less considerate. The policy intervention also affected implicit gender beliefs. Participants in the policy condition displayed more entrenched male-advantaged gender beliefs compared to the baseline condition. We interpret this as evidence that sexual harassment policies may have the unintended effect of activating unequal gender beliefs, which run contrary to the policy's equalizing aims. This research also suggests the value of measuring both explicit and implicit gender beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Similarity and Group Performance.
- Author
-
Civettini, Nicole H.W.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL groups research , *PERFORMANCE , *SIMILARITY (Psychology) , *PROBLEM solving -- Social aspects , *BALANCE theory (Social theory) , *HOMOPHILY theory (Communication) ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This paper investigates the effects that different patterns of similarity among group members have on a group's performance on a problem-solving task. I discuss and test hypotheses on the effects of similarity on group performance derived from two literatures: balance theory and research on homophily. In an experiment I found that the relative balance of the pattern of similarity was more important in predicting how quickly groups establish norms of interaction and complete a task than how similar group members were to each other. Neither balance nor the degree of similarity had a significant effect on the quality of the groups' work. I conclude that groups with balanced similarity structures produce task solutions that approximate the quality of those from other groups, but they do so in significantly less time. That is, balanced groups are more efficient than unbalanced groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Identity Entrepreneurship and the Consequences of Identity Failure: The Dynamics of Leadership in the BBC Prison Study.
- Author
-
Haslam, S. Alexander and Reicher, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *LEADERSHIP , *GROUP identity , *INSTITUTIONALIZED persons , *PSYCHOLOGY of correctional personnel , *PRISON psychology - Abstract
The BBC Prison Study was an experimental case study in which participants were randomly assigned to groups as prisoners or guards. This paper examines the impact of interventions designed to increase prisoners' sense of shared social identity on processes of leadership. It presents psychometric, behavioral, and observational data which support the propositions that (a) social identity makes leadership possible, (b) effective leadership facilitates the development of social identity, and (c) the long-term success and failure of leadership depends on the viability of identity-related projects. The study also points to the role of identity failure in precipitating change in general and the emergence of authoritarian leadership in particular. Findings provide integrated support for claims that social identity and self-categorization processes are fundamental to the leadership process and associated experiences of collective efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Expecting and Accepting: The Temporal Ambiguity of Recovery Identities.
- Author
-
Howard, Jenna
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *MENTAL illness & society , *SOCIOLOGY ,MENTAL health & society ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
This paper has two complementary agendas. One is to develop a formal analysis of temporal ambiguity in self-identification. This refers specifically to having two conflicting orientations toward the future with regard to one's identity (e. g., a temporary expecting orientation and a permanent accepting orientation). I use the recovery identity (e. g., alcoholic, anorexic, agoraphobic) as a temporally ambiguous case because this identity is established as a means to an end but is susceptible to becoming an end in itself through identification with the disorder label. My analysis is based on the recovery narratives of individuals who have disidentified with their disorder labels; this allows for a consideration of the entire recovery career, from entry to exit. My second agenda is to explore the underresearched phenomenology of exiting from recovery identities specifically. Both of these agendas contribute new insight into identity research, labeling theory, and the sociology of mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Does a "Norm of Self-Interest" Discourage Prosocial Behavior? Rationality and Quid Pro Quo in Charitable Giving.
- Author
-
Simpson, Brent, Irwin, Kyle, and Lawrence, Peter
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL norms , *SELF-interest , *HYPOTHESIS , *FIELD research , *COGNITIVE dissonance , *COMPASSION , *CHARITIES , *CHARITABLE uses, trusts, & foundations - Abstract
Previous studies by Holmes, Miller, and Lerner (2002) support the norm of self-interest and exchange fiction hypotheses. Together these arguments state that people want to act on compassionate feelings (e.g., by donating to charities) but are reluctant to do so if they cannot justify their behavior as being in line with their own self-interest. Thus a person will be more likely to contribute to a charity when he or she receives a product in exchange for the contribution. This exchange fiction gives the person egoistic cover for the compassionate act. In this paper we critically evaluate the evidence for this line of reasoning and offer an alternative explanation for that evidence based on cognitive dissonance theory. We report the results of a new field experiment designed to tease apart the exchange fiction argument and the alternative approach. Results of the study support our application of dissonance theory over the exchange fiction account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. "I'm Not an Immigrant!": Resistance, Redefinition, and the Role of Resources in Identity Work.
- Author
-
Killian, Caitlin and Johnson, Cathryn
- Subjects
- *
NORTH Africans , *IMMIGRANTS , *NONCITIZENS , *NATIVISM , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SENSORY perception , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *WOMEN - Abstract
In this paper we examine the identity negotiation processes of North African immigrant women in France. Participants engaged in various forms of identity work, including selective association and management of appearance, as well as resisting others' attempts to categorize them as immigrants. Given that these women have chosen to move to France and remain there, this finding is surprising. Using the concept of the Not-Me identity, we explore how people can redefine and refuse labels that seem to be self-evident and to lack room for negotiation. At the same time, we examine how class and educational resources and other structural factors influence these immigrant women's ability to control others' perceptions of their identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Motives and Contexts of Identity Change: A Case for Network Effects.
- Author
-
McFarland, Daniel and Pals, Heili
- Subjects
- *
GROUP identity , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL networks , *SOCIAL perception , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIAL change , *LOGITS , *SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
In this paper we interrelate different theories of identity and describe how various social contexts and cognitive motives influence the process of identity change. We consider two competing theories about the linkage of contexts with motives for identity change: the effect of category traits, based on social identity theory, and the effect of social networks, based on identity theory. To explore these relations, we use data collected on more than 6,000 adolescents at six high schools in two consecutive school years. Multilevel logit models reveal a strong relationship between contexts and perceived identity imbalances, and a strong effect of identity imbalance on identity change. More important than category traits are the social network characteristics of prominence, homogeneity, and bridging; these form social contexts that affect perceptions of identity imbalance, and the perceptions in turn lead to a heightened incidence of identity change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Explaining Differences in Mental Health Between Married and Cohabiting Individuals.
- Author
-
Marcussen, Kristen
- Subjects
- *
INTERPERSONAL relations , *UNMARRIED couples , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL psychology , *ALCOHOL , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL status , *ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
Research on the relationship between cohabitation and mental health tends to ignore social psychological factors that help explain mental health differences between the married and the unmarried, including coping resources and perceived relationship quality. In this paper I draw on social psychological theory and research to clarify differences in depression and alcohol use between married and cohabiting individuals. Using data from the National Survey of Families and Households, I examine the independent and combined influences of socioeconomic status, coping resources, and relationship quality to account for marital status differences in distress. I find that marital status differences in coping resources and relationship quality help explain the gap in depression, but not in alcohol use, between married and cohabiting individuals. I also find that social selection is not responsible for marital status differences in distress. The implications of these findings for future research on cohabitors' mental health are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "Empathy" and "Sympathy" in Action: Attending to Patients' Troubles in Finnish Homeopathic and General Practice Consultations.
- Author
-
Ruusuvuori, Johanna
- Subjects
- *
SYMPATHY , *EMPATHY , *PATIENTS , *HOMEOPATHY , *COMPASSION , *CONDUCT of life - Abstract
This paper analyzes "empathy" and "sympathy" as situated practices, sequential processes that are coconstructed by the participants in the situation. The data consists of 228 sequences of patients' descriptions of their problematic experiences and professionals' responses to them in videorecorded general practice and homeopathic consultations. One deviant case, in which the practitioner shows compassion to the patient in an exceptional way, is subjected to detailed analysis. It is argued that both professionals and patients orient to a degree of professional neutrality in these situations, but also that affiliative practices can be adjusted to the otherwise problem-governed course of the consultation. These orientations seem to address questions similar to those of theoretical distinctions made between the terms empathy and sympathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Terms of Agreement: Indexing Epistemic Authority and Subordination in Talk-in-Interaction.
- Author
-
Heritage, John and Raymond, Geoffrey
- Subjects
- *
ACQUIESCENCE (Psychology) , *SUBORDINATION (Psychology) , *AUTHORITARIAN personality , *SOCIAL status , *NARRATORS , *EPISTEMICS - Abstract
Within the general framework of agreement on a state of affairs, the matter of the terms of agreement can remain: determining whose view is the more significant or more authoritative with respect to the matter at hand. In this paper we focus on this issue as it is played out in assessment sequences. We examine four practices through which a second speaker can index the independence of an agreeing assessment from that of a first speaker, and in this way can qualify the agreement. We argue that these practices reduce the responsiveness of the second assessment to the first; in this way they resist any claim to epistemic authority that may be indexed by the first speaker in "going first" in assessing some state of affairs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Classroom Roles and School Adjustment.
- Author
-
van Rossem, Ronan and Vermande, Marjolijn M.
- Subjects
- *
CLASSROOM environment , *CLASSROOM activities , *SOCIAL interaction , *CHILDHOOD attitudes , *CHILD psychology , *SOCIOMETRY - Abstract
The peer group is an important developmental context for children. In this paper we present a method to operationalize a child's integration into the classroom by their informal social classroom roles, which we obtained using a blockmodel analysis based on role equivalence. This method differs in several respects from the common sociometric status approach. Analysis of multiplex social relationships of 1,241 first-grade children in 71 classrooms showed nine empirical classroom roles. The roles were not associated with physical attractiveness not with ethnic ancestry, were associated only weakly with age, sex, and intelligence, and were associated strongly with school adjustment. Classroom roles and sociometric status were clearly associated, but measured different aspects of a child's integration into the classroom. For all school problems except academic performance, classroom roles explained a much larger proportion of the variance than did sociometric status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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