17 results
Search Results
2. Toward A Sociology of Nuclear Weapons.
- Author
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Kramer, Ronald C. and Marullo, Sam
- Subjects
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NUCLEAR warfare , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY literature , *WAR & literature , *RESEARCH - Abstract
This article serves as an introduction to the issue's special feature on "The Nuclear Threat." The early sociological literature on nuclear war related issues is reviewed and the dearth of sociological work in this area since the early 1960s is documented. A new call for sociological theory and research on the nuclear threat is issued and possible topics are outlined. The paper concludes with a brief review of the papers that make up the special feature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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3. The Problems and Values of Attitude Research.
- Author
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Lauer, Robert H.
- Subjects
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BEHAVIOR , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Considerable attention has been given recently to the perplexing problem of the relationship between attitudes and behavior (Ehrlich, 1969; Deutscher, 1969; Warner and DeFleur, 1969; Ajzen et al., 1970; Lastrucci, 1970; Tarter, 1970). Methodological issues have been debated, the lack of congruence between attitudes and behavior has been examined, and a variety of solutions have been offered. We are told, for example, that the continuing poor correlation between measured attitudes and overt behavior requires us to search for the intervening variable or variables which apparently obtain (Ehrlich, 1969); or to employ the "direct observation" of the phenomenon under investigation rather than try to extrapolate from paper-and-pencil tests to behavior (Deutscher, 1969); or to develop theories that, in turn, enable us to find indicators that are more valid than the paper-and-pencil type (Lastrueci, 1970); or to simply admit that attitudes as "presently conceptualized play no real role in behavior" (Tarter, 1970). A number of important aspects of attitude research, however, have been obscured or omitted in these discussions. For the surprising aspect of the situation is not, as has often been implied, the lack of congruence between attitudes and behavior, but the persistent use of research designs that are inappropriate for the complexity of the subject under investigation. Further, it is surprising that researchers have failed to draw out other important implications of their research. That is, the fact that an attitude does not lead directly to a behavior does not justify the assertion that attitudes play no role in behavior, or that attitude research lacks significant implications for social life. The basis for this latter statement will be shown below in a discussion of the values of attitude research. It may be that inadequate research designs, valued for their simplicity rather than their appropriateness, are a manifestation of the "publish or perish" syndrome. In any ease, this paper attempts to outline the problems and the values of attitude research, and to demonstrate thereby that such research is of great significance for the understanding of social phenomena. If that significance seems minimized by those studies that have found poor correlation between attitudes and behavior, the fault lies both in the failure to create research designs that reflect the complexity of the problem and in the tendency to exalt the importance of the proximate causes of overt behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
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4. The Scientific Community: Organic or Mechanical?
- Author
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Downey, Kenneth J.
- Subjects
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SCIENCE & society , *SCIENTIFIC community , *SOCIOLOGY , *EMPIRICISM , *COMMUNITIES , *RESEARCH - Abstract
It is the thesis of this paper that the theoretical trend within the sociology of science during the past three decades has increasingly embraced an implicit organic model of science and this is an incorrect model of science. It is further hypothesized that a mechanical model is more appropriate, and many of the empirical "facts" which have supported the organic approach are equally valid for the mechanical. This paper presents an argument to support these hypotheses composed of the following parts. First, the organic and mechanical models are described and discussed as a composite of the famous typologies of Durkheim and Toennies. In addition, those aspects of these models which have undergone conceptual transformation since their early formulation will be discussed insofar as they have a bearing upon the application of the models to the scientific community. Second, the theoretical history of the sociology of science will be presented and critically examined to illustrate exactly how components of the organic model entered this history at various times and in various guises. Third, the social characteristics of science will be compared to the organic and mechanical models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
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5. Reply To Beeghley.
- Author
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Blain, Robert R.
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGICAL research , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL science research , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The author clarifies the points made by critic Leonard Beeghley about his sociological research on four function paradigm. The critic is correct in his contention that the paper missed the point on the dual application in the four function paradigm. The reasons why the paper never went too far with the argument is the lack of necessity to do so. However, the author examined the propositions upon which the four function paradigm is based and finding them contradictory, felt there was no need to deal with the applications of the paradigm that depended upon the validity of the propositions. Furthermore, the difficulties in the paradigm are so abundant that quite independent additional arguments can be advanced against it. Thus, while the argument presented in the research that the paradigm's foundational propositions are contradictory, the arguments presented in the research is quite sufficient.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
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6. GROUNDING THE POSTMODERN SELF.
- Author
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Gubrium, Jaber F. and Holstein, James A.
- Subjects
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POSTMODERNISM (Philosophy) , *VOCABULARY , *RESEARCH , *LECTURES & lecturing , *PHILOSOPHY , *DICTION - Abstract
In postmodern discourse, sell is displaced as a central presence in experience and reappropriated as yet another personal signifier. This paper describes key postmodern views, then reframes postmodern vocabulary in terms of interpretive practice. It argues that the postmodern (raining of self is too abstract and that a distinctly modern discourse focused on the deprivatization of interpretive activity can account empirically lot features if post modern "presence." Comparative ethnographic and narrative mate- rial is offered in illustration. We conclude by suggesting how self can be retrieved for classical sociological commentary and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
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7. CRITICAL BIOGRAPHY WITHOUT SUBJECTS AND OBJECTS: An Encounter With Dr. Lillian Moller Gilbreth.
- Author
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Graham, Laurel D.
- Subjects
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INDUSTRIAL engineers , *RESEARCH , *GENEALOGY , *ENGINEERS ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
Retracing my own research experience in creating a sociological narrative about a famous industrial engineer and mother. I describe how I began to question modernist images of self, interests, and power. As I reflected on how best to characterize Gilbreth's management of women, I began to see that my nation of how to write critical, historical biography rested heavily on a binary, modernist conceptual foundation. My research experience rocked this foundation by convincing me that we should see selves as multiple and interests as malleable, and that we should broaden our conception of power to include disciplinary power which circulates through people rather than belonging to them. The paper concludes by affirming the merits of new ways of writing about people that acknowledge their multiple selves without sacrificing the political strength of modernist language. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
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8. Fear of Crime Among Older People: A Reassessment of the Predictive Power of Crime-Related Factors.
- Author
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Miethe, Terance D. and Lee, Gary R.
- Subjects
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CRIME victims , *CRIMINAL reparations , *CRIMINOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *VIOLENCE , *RESEARCH - Abstract
The impact of victimization experiences and crime-related variables on act-specific fear of crime are reinvestigated. Perceived risk and vulnerability to crime were expected to mediate the influence of demographic and crime-related variables on fear. The results of this study suggest that fear of property loss is more explainable by crime-related variables than is fear of violent victimization. Perceptual variables diminish the direct impact of victimization experiences and local crime rate on each type of fear of crime. However, particular demographic and crime-related variables have different effects on fear of property loss and fear of violent crime. The paper concludes with suggestions for future research on the social determinants of fear of crime among the elderly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
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9. Interpreting Proportional Reduction in Error Measures as Percentage of Variation Explained.
- Author
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Kviz, Frederick J.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL groups , *ERROR , *RESEARCH , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Costner (1965) showed that many of the most commonly used measures of association may be conceptually interpreted as indicating proportional reduction in prediction error. But because it is verbally cumbersome, and conceptually complex for some measures, the proportional reduction in error interpretation has not been widely incorporated in research reports where appropriate. Instead, measures of association continue to be interpreted in abstract terms distinguishing between broad levels of strength. This paper demonstrates that all proportional reduction in error measures of association may be alternately interpreted as indicating the percent of variation explained. Because this interpretation is conceptually meaningful in a manner highly relevant for scientific investigation, more convenient to apply in research reports, and already familiar to most social scientists, it is argued that it be standardly applied to all proportional reduction in error measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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10. Organizational Maintenance, Sensitivity to Clients, and Vulnerability: Some New Suggestions About a Traditional Concept.
- Author
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Soson, Michael
- Subjects
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ORGANIZATION , *INTERORGANIZATIONAL relations , *SOCIOLOGY , *JUVENILE courts , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Maintenance, an important concept in the organizational literature, is often assumed to be a key factor in the low levels of sensitivity to client needs and demands apparent in many human service organizations. This paper uses data from a national sample of juvenile courts to demonstrate, however, that maintenance may relate to other variables in ways that are at variance with the common assumption. The maintenance of internal organizational operations is bound closely to the development of ties to the community; as a result, strong emphasis on maintenance actually leads to high levels of sensitivity to clients when certain environmental forces demand it. This positive relation is especially strong when organizations are highly vulnerable to external pressures. Such results suggest a contingent view of the role of maintenance in organizations and imply some further directions for research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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11. The Conceptualization of Scientific Specialties.
- Author
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Chubin, Daryl E.
- Subjects
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SPECIALISTS , *EXPERTISE , *RESEARCH , *CASE method (Teaching) , *SCIENTISTS , *SCIENTIFIC community , *JOB classification - Abstract
This paper analyzes the phenomenon of research specialization in science. The format consists of two sections. The first features a state-of-the-art review of evidence from so-called specialty case studies on definitions, measurement strategies, and representations of the relations in which small groups of researchers cohere. In the second section, a theoretical perspective on the development of specialties is formulated. This perspective incorporates demographic factors into the study of specialty structures and processes, and suggests in particular that core researchers derive innovations from the margins of their specialty. It is further hypothesized that both maintenance and realignment of social structures, i.e., communication and status configurations, depend on intellectual events that occur in the course of normal scientific progress. Finally, the notions of intellectual migration as a career research style and the prevalence of transient specialties lacking institutionalized bases are explored and recommended, among others, for empirical study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Processual Characteristics of Self-Conception.
- Author
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Mahoney, E.R.
- Subjects
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SELF-perception , *RESEARCH , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *AWARENESS , *SENSORY perception - Abstract
One of the major gaps in research in TST measured self-conception is data relevant to the assumption that self-conception is a stable structure of meanings attached to self. This paper indicates the inconsistency between current theoretical and empirical orientations in the area of self-conception and outlines three basic models of the processual characteristics of self-conception found in the literature. Using a ten wave panel design in which self-conception is measured repeatedly throughout the subjects' daily interactional routines, specific hypotheses derived from the models are tested. Results suggest which model is most appropriate for the description of the processual characteristics of various aspects of self-conception and the possible errors involved in the continued use of current self-conception research designs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
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13. Respondents' Intrusion Upon the Situation: The Problem of Interviewing Subjects with Special Qualities.
- Author
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Skipper Jr., James K. and McCaghy, Charles H.
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL science research , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *SOCIOGRAPHY , *RESEARCH , *BEHAVIOR - Abstract
Researchers have long been aware that when they become part of the system they are investigating, their own behavior may a.fleet the behavior they wish to study. Little data has been collected on the effect of respondents on the researcher and the consequences of this on tho research process. The problem is described and analyzed in this paper. We contend that respondents who have special qualities may intrude upon the researcher's role and make it difficult for him to collect necessary data. An illustration is presented from the authors' study of stripteasers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Toward a Paradigm for Respondent Bias in Survey Research.
- Author
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Summers, Gene F. and Hammonds, Andre D.
- Subjects
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SURVEYS , *RESPONDENTS , *PREJUDICES , *RESEARCH , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
No research results are any better than the quality of the data. As scientists, survey researchers must share the problems of measuring, understanding, and controlling bias in their data. The potential sources of bias in survey research are many and varied. They may appear at any one or all of the several stages of the data gathering process. For example, they may occur in the selection of the sample, in the development of measuring instruments, in securing the responses of the persons in the sample, in the respondents replies, in the recording of the responses, and in processing the recorded responses. Even beyond the data collection process, bias may occur, as in the misapplication of statistics and in the interpretation of data. Progress has been made toward identifying and controlling sources of bias in some of these stages of the research process. Perhaps most progress has been made in the sampling stage and in the statistical application stage. Much advance has been made also in the reduction of error at the instrumentation stage. However, considerable work remains to be done on the problems of error control, especially biasing error, at all stages of the research between instrumentation and statistical analysis. This includes getting full response from the sample, accurate answers to the questions asked, and accurate recording and processing of responses. The accumulation of bias from these and other possible sources may be referred to as total or aggregate bias. The total bias may then be divided for analytical purposes into the following types: (1) sampling bias, (2) instrumentation bias, (3) non-response bias, (4) respondent bias, (5) interviewer bias, and (6) processing bias. This paper is an effort to deal with the problem of respondent bias in survey research. That respondent bias is a potent force in diminishing the validity and reliability of results from survey research is well recognized. The recognition of this condition has led to an enormous amount of activity aimed at isolating factors which determine this weakness of research results. These studies, by and large, have dealt with the problem of determining the direction of respondent bias, its magnitude, the speearle variables which produce respondent bias, and the effect of such bias on research results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
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15. Self-Conceptions and Others: A Further Test of Meadian Hypotheses.
- Author
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Quarantelli, E.L. and Cooper, Joseph
- Subjects
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SELF-perception , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIAL interaction , *RESEARCH , *HYPOTHESIS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper we attempt to do the following with respect to the symbolic interactionist approach to social psychological phenomena: (1) to add to its relatively meager empirical base; (2) to develop a neglected aspect of the position, namely, the time dimension; and (3) to contribute to both the replication and the extension of the limited systematic research which has used this particular framework to focus on the key concept of self. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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16. A Contribution to the Theory of Typology Construction.
- Author
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Bloombaum, Milton
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *EMPIRICAL research , *RESEARCH - Abstract
A number of questions have been recently raised or re-raised with respect to the status and intended function in sociology of the methodological device known as the "type." Martindale's summary of the historical and contemporary uses to which the typology has been put as well as his formulation of the issues connected with such use permits the economy of moving directly into a specification of the problems considered in this paper, and the proposed solutions. The present effort is directed primarily at providing one solution to the often raised problem of "the relation between the idealization involved in the type and the empirical reality," although less pressing issues are also treated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
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17. Inference Without Exploration: A Comment.
- Author
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Lauer, Robert H.
- Subjects
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PROTESTANTS , *CHRISTIAN sects , *POWER (Social sciences) , *CHURCH polity , *RESEARCH , *EMPIRICISM - Abstract
The paper by Takayama and Cannon on formal polity and the distribution of power among Protestant denominations is a good example of statistical significance which either has no substantive significance or at least does not have the substantive significance attributed to it. The problem seems to be a lack of what Blumer called exploration. Blumer used the notion of exploration to stress the importance of "a close and comprehensive acquaintance with sphere of social life that is unfamiliar" to the researcher. The point is that researchers must remain in continual contact with the empirical world that they are studying, and be guided by that empirical world in fashioning their conclusions.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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