128 results
Search Results
2. Can digital data diagnose mental health problems? A sociological exploration of 'digital phenotyping'.
- Author
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H. Birk, Rasmus and Samuel, Gabrielle
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis , *ALGORITHMS , *MENTAL health , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *TECHNOLOGY , *PHENOTYPES , *SOFTWARE analytics - Abstract
This paper critically explores the research and development of 'digital phenotyping', which broadly refers to the idea that digital data can measure and predict people's mental health as well as their potential risk for mental ill health. Despite increasing research and efforts to digitally track and predict ill mental health, there has been little sociological and critical engagement with this field. This paper aims to fill this gap by introducing digital phenotyping to the social sciences. We explore the origins of digital phenotyping, the concept of the digital phenotype and its potential for benefit, linking these to broader developments within the field of 'mental health sensing'. We then critically discuss the technology, offering three critiques. First, that there may be assumptions of normality and bias present in the use of algorithms; second, we critique the idea that digital data can act as a proxy for social life; and third that the often biological language employed in this field risks reifying mental health problems. Our aim is not to discredit the scientific work in this area, but rather to call for scientists to remain reflexive in their work, and for more social science engagement in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. What makes for a successful sociology? A response to "Against a descriptive turn".
- Author
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Savage, Mike
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *DEBATE , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *EDUCATION research , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper responds to Nick Gane's "Against a descriptive turn". I argue that descriptive research strategies are more open and inclusive than those which purport to be causal where explanatory adequacy is assessed by expert insiders. I also show how open descriptive strategies can assist a wider explanatory purpose when these are conceived in non‐positivist ways. I argue that epochalist sociology lacks an adequate temporal ontology because it collapses descriptive specificity back into overarching epoch descriptions. Finally, I argue that if the entire range of publications associated with the Great British Class Survey are considered, that it has demonstrated a productive way of recognising the significance of class which has facilitated major research advances in its wake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Ageing, dementia and the social mind: past, present and future perspectives.
- Author
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Higgs, Paul and Gilleard, Chris
- Subjects
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TREATMENT of dementia , *DEMENTIA , *AGING , *FORECASTING , *GERIATRICS , *HUMANITIES , *INDIVIDUALITY , *RESEARCH , *SERIAL publications , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Accompanying the ageing of contemporary ageing societies is an increase in age associated morbidity, with dementia having an important impact. Mental frailty in later life is a source of fear for many and a major policy concern to all those concerned with health and welfare services. This introduction to the special issue on 'Ageing, dementia and the social mind' situates the selected papers within the context of debates about dementia and its social relations. In particular it draws attention to the importance of the social imaginary of the fourth age and what this means for the issue of personhood, care, social representations of dementia and its social contextualisation. The papers illuminating these themes draw on a variety of disciplines and approaches; from the social sciences to the humanities and from the theoretical to the empirical in order to help orientate future researchers to the complexities of dementia and the social and cultural matrix in which it exists. This paper provides an introduction to the potential for a more extended sociology of dementia; one which could combine the insights from medical sociology with the concerns of social gerontology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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5. THE CURRENT STATUS OF RURAL SOCIOLOGY.
- Author
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Benvenuti, Bruno, Galjart, Benno, and Newey, Howard
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RURAL sociology , *SOCIAL sciences , *DEBATE , *SOCIAL science research , *PAPER , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
In the firm belief that rural sociology is currently in a state of malaise, this paper attempts to diagnose the sickness. Some of the main aspects of what is called 'conventional rural sociology' are outlined and their limitations discussed. It is argued strongly that rural sociology must become more theoretically-oriented in the problems it sets itself and that more attention be given to conceptual and theoretical issues. It is hoped that the paper will provide a focus which will stimulate debate around the questions raised. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
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6. THE WEBER THESIS OF CALVINISM AND CAPITALISM-ITS VARIOUS VERSIONS AND THEIR 'FATE' IN SOCIAL SCIENCE.
- Author
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ZAFIROVSKI, MILAN
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CALVINISM , *PROTESTANTISM , *CAPITALISM , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper identifies and examines various multiple renditions of the so-called Weber Thesis of an historical association and convergence between ascetic Protestantism, above all Calvinism, and the emergence and development of modern capitalism as an economic spirit and system. Specifically, it detects at least four different versions and formulations or interpretations, thus casting doubt in the common view of the Weber Thesis as a single and monolithic theory or hypothesis. The paper also considers the status of the multiple versions of the Weber Thesis in post-Weberian and contemporary sociology and related disciplines like economics and history. It concludes that the weaker, relaxed renditions of the Weber Thesis have attained a greater success and more endured in contemporary social science than have its stronger, stricter versions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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7. What has become of critique? Reassembling sociology after Latour.
- Author
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Mills, Tom
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SOCIOLOGY , *ACTOR-network theory , *REALISM , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Abstract: This paper offers a defence of sociology through an engagement with Actor Network Theory (ANT) and particularly the critique of ‘critical’ and politically engaged social science developed by Bruno Latour. It argues that ANT identifies some weaknesses in more conventional sociology and social theory, and suggests that ‘critical’ and ‘public’ orientated sociologists can learn from the analytical precision and ethnographic sensibilities that characterize ANT as a framework of analysis and a research programme. It argues, however, that Latour et al. have too hastily dispensed with ‘critique’ in favour of a value neutral descriptive sociology, and that the symmetrical and horizontalist approach adopted in ANT is particularly ill‐suited to the development of scientific knowledge about social structures. It argues that a more straightforwardly realist sociology would share many of the strengths of ANT whilst being better able to interrogate, empirically and normatively, the centres of contemporary social power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. How fields vary.
- Author
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Krause, Monika
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *AUTONOMY (Philosophy) , *HIERARCHIES - Abstract
Abstract: Field theorists have long insisted that research needs to pay attention to the particular properties of each field studied. But while much field‐theoretical research is comparative, either explicitly or implicitly, scholars have only begun to develop the language for describing the dimensions along which fields can be similar to and different from each other. In this context, this paper articulates an agenda for the analysis of variable properties of fields. It discusses variation in the degree but also in the kind of field autonomy. It discusses different dimensions of variation in field structure: fields can be more or less contested, and more or less hierarchical. The structure of symbolic oppositions in a field may take different forms. Lastly, it analyses the dimensions of variation highlighted by research on fields on the sub‐ and transnational scale. Post‐national analysis allows us to ask how fields relate to fields of the same kind on different scales, and how fields relate to fields on the same scale in other national contexts. It allows us to ask about the role resources from other scales play in structuring symbolic oppositions within fields. A more fine‐tuned vocabulary for field variation can help us better describe particular fields and it is a precondition for generating hypotheses about the conditions under which we can expect to observe fields with specified characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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9. Making their own futures? Research change and diversity amongst contemporary British human geographers.
- Author
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Hall, Tim
- Subjects
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HUMAN geography , *GEOGRAPHERS , *EXPERTISE , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL theory , *CULTURAL geography , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
The paper discusses a survey of British academic human geographers enquiring about change and diversification within personal research activities, their nature, motivations and impacts. It argues that this is widespread and a significant aspect of the production of contemporary geographical knowledge. The findings highlight the range of motivations underpinning research change, its impacts and mediation through the institutional context of British human geography. It concludes that despite a more prescriptive institutional context geographers have a degree of autonomy, albeit somewhat fettered, to shape their own research trajectories to some extent. This provides some important capacity with which to engage with imminent challenges facing the discipline in the UK). The paper complements recent critical histories of geography and sociological accounts of the discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Nations, National Cultures, and Natural Languages: A Contribution to the Sociology of Nations.
- Author
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Pickel, Andreas
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CULTURE , *LANGUAGE & languages , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL impact , *SOCIAL sciences , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
This paper seeks to contribute to the sociology of nations, a literature that is only starting to carve out its place in the social sciences. The paper offers a reconceptualization of 'nations' as 'national cultures', employing an evolutionary perspective and a systemic framework in which 'nations' are understood as cultural systems of a special kind. National cultures are intimately tied to natural languages, and the acquisition of a national culture occurs as part and parcel of the acquisition of a natural language. Acquiring a natural language is a prerequisite for learning other cultural systems (artefactual languages as well as other natural languages). National cultures function as metacultures. They are also the reference cultures for modern states and their citizens, a political dimension of nations that is of paramount importance, though it will only be touched on in this paper. National cultures should be considered as the most fundamental type of cultural system today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Reconceptualizing resistance: sociology and the affective dimension of resistance.
- Author
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Hynes, Maria
- Subjects
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RESISTANCE (Philosophy) , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *RESISTANCE to government , *EMOTIONS , *POLITICAL opposition , *POSTSTRUCTURALISM , *POWER (Social sciences) , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper re-examines the sociological study of resistance in light of growing interest in the concept of affect. Recent claims that we are witness to an 'affective turn' and calls for a 'new sociological empiricism' sensitive to affect indicate an emerging paradigm shift in sociology. Yet, mainstream sociological study of resistance tends to have been largely unaffected by this shift. To this end, this paper presents a case for the significance of affect as a lens by which to approach the study of resistance. My claim is not simply that the forms of actions we would normally recognize as resistance have an affective dimension. Rather, it is that the theory of affect broadens 'resistance' beyond the purview of the two dominant modes of analysis in sociology; namely, the study of macropolitical forms, on the one hand, and the micropolitics of everyday resistance on the other. This broadened perspective challenges the persistent assumption that ideological forms of power and resistance are the most pertinent to the contemporary world, suggesting that much power and resistance today is of a more affective nature. In making this argument, it is a Deleuzian reading of affect that is pursued, which opens up to a level of analysis beyond the common understanding of affect as emotion. I argue that an affective approach to resistance would pay attention to those barely perceptible transitions in power and mobilizations of bodily potential that operate below the conscious perceptions and subjective emotions of social actors. These affective transitions constitute a new site at which both power and resistance operate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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12. Social Structure and Social Relations.
- Author
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Elder-Vass, Dave
- Subjects
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SOCIAL structure , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL realism , *SOCIAL sciences , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *CRITICAL thinking - Abstract
This paper replies to Porpora, King, and Varela's responses to my earlier paper “For Emergence”, focussing on the relationship between the concepts of social structure and social relations. It recognises the importance of identifying the mechanisms responsible whenever we make claims for the emergence of causal powers, and discusses the mechanism underlying one case of social structure: normative institutions. It also shows how critical realism reconciles the claims that both social structures and human individuals have emergent causal powers that combine to produce actual social events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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13. Critical realism as emancipatory action: the case for realistic evaluation in practice development.
- Author
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Wilson, Valerie and McCormack, Brendan
- Subjects
- *
METHODOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *CONDUCT of life , *SOCIOLOGY , *CRITICAL realism , *VIRTUE , *RESEARCH , *SCIENTIFIC method , *THEORY-practice relationship - Abstract
To provide rigour when preparing a research design, the researcher needs to carefully consider not only the methodology but also the philosophical intent of the study. This, however, is often absent from reported research and provides the reader with little evidence by which to judge the merits of the chosen methodology and its influence on the study. The purpose of this paper is to set out the case for critical realism as a framework to guide appropriate action in practice development and realistic evaluation for understanding the consequences of those actions. It is evident that critical realism and critical social science share common ground. Emancipatory practice development (ePD) is based on the philosophy of critical social science and therefore by virtue is linked to the tenets of critical realism. Until now, the evaluation of ePD programme has been well served by 4th-generation evaluation. However, this paper outlines the need for a different approach to evaluation, one that is based on critical realism, that is concerned with emancipation, and that can be used in the ever-changing environment of clinical practice. Realistic evaluation not only links strongly to ePD programmes, but also serves as the basis for effective research questions that will test the outcomes of the research and inform the transferability of ePD mechanisms into differing contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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14. Notes to contributors.
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *PERIODICALS , *PUBLISHING , *AUTHORS , *RESEARCH - Abstract
The aim of this journal is to provide a medium for the publication of original papers covering the entire span of sociological thought and research. The editor is particularly keen to publish work on current developments in research and analysis. All contributions, correspondence and books for review should be addressed to The British Journal of Sociology, London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London. Papers submitted for publication are normally read by at least two assessors as well as by one of the editors. The editor's decision will be final. A decision of an article will usually be sent to authors within four months of submission, however, whilst every effort will be made to follow this practice, it should be understood that there may be circumstances where this will be difficult to guarantee. Articles submitted to the journal should be an original piece of work, not been published before and not being considered for publication elsewhere in its final form either in printed or electronic form.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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15. Situated Objectivity.
- Author
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Williams, Malcolm
- Subjects
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OBJECTIVITY , *SUBJECTIVITY , *SOCIAL values , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
ABSTRACT:This paper is a re-examination of the issue of objectivity in sociology. Though it begins from the premise that objectivity is a necessary precondition for a minimally scientific sociology, it sides with subjectivists who claim that values are ever present in investigation. Values are shown to exist along a continuum in investigation. The paper develops the argument that objectivity is a value itself and is nested in other values that will take on a contextual character dependent upon disciplines. Two brief research examples are used to illustrate the way in which objectivity is transferred (or fails to get transferred) through three different levels in sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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16. POWER IN SOCIAL ORGANIZATION AS THE SUBJECT OF JUSTICE.
- Author
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JAMES, AARON
- Subjects
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SOCIAL justice , *POWER (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL structure , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper suggests that the state is subject to assessment according to principles of social justice because state institutions or practices exercise forms of power over which no particular person has control. This rationale for assessment of social justice equally applies to legally optional or informal social practices. But it does not apply to individual conduct. Indeed, it follows that principles of social justice cannot provide a basis for the assessment and guidance of individual choice. The paper develops this practice-based conception of the subject of justice by rejoining G. A. Cohen's influential critique of Rawls’ focus on the“basic structure” of society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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17. Notes to Contributors.
- Subjects
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PERIODICALS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *EDITORS , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The article presents a note to contributors to "The British Journal of Sociology." The aim of the journal is to provide a medium for the publication of original papers covering the entire span of sociological thought and research. The editor is particularly keen to publish work on current developments in research and analysis. All contributions, correspondence and books for review should be addressed to The British Journal of Sociology, London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE. Papers submitted for publication are normally read by at least two assessors as well as by one of the editors. The editor's decision will be final. A decision of an article will usually be sent to authors within four months of submission, however, whilst every effort will be made to follow this practice, it should be understood that there may be circumstances where this will be difficult to guarantee. Articles submitted to the journal should be an original piece of work, not been published before and not being considered for publication elsewhere in its final form either in printed or electronic form.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Beyond toleration: privacy, citizenship and sexual minorities in England and Wales.
- Author
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McGhee, Derek
- Subjects
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BISEXUAL people , *PRIVACY , *SOCIAL psychology , *CITIZENSHIP , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper examines two significant moments in sexual minority citizenship in England and Wales in relation to one of the Marshallian sets of rights, namely, civil or legal rights, focusing specifically on the Sex Offences legislation and policing practices. The first moment that will be examined here is the process whereby homosexual acts were decriminalized in the 1950s and 1960s: here special attention will be paid to the recommendations made by the Wolfenden Committee. The second moment is one we are currently experiencing, which is associated with the inclusive policing of sexual minority communities (especially lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities) under the provisions of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998 and in the review of Sex Offences, especially in the consultation paper (Home Office 2000) and White Paper (Home Office 2002) associated with this review. Privacy and toleration dominate the first moment, at the same time it shall be demonstrated that privacy is also central to the British Sexual Citizenship literatures that have emerged in sociology in the post Wolfenden context. However, as the title suggests, the second moment under examination points to the emergence of a rather more extensive sexual minority citizenship beyond the boundaries of ‘homosexual privacy’ (which British Sexual Citizenship Studies is not currently engaging with) and perhaps even beyond the boundaries of toleration through ever more ‘inclusive’ policing strategies and through the review of sex offences in which many discriminatory laws are being ‘de-homosexualized’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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19. Imagining The Sociological Imagination: the biographical context of a sociological classic.
- Author
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Brewer, John D.
- Subjects
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BIOGRAPHICAL methods in sociology , *BIOGRAPHICAL methods in the social sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
Charles Wright Mills's arguments in The Sociological Imagination are very popular and this paper focuses on the biographical context in which his programmatic statements were occasioned. This breaks new ground by locating The Sociological Imagination and earlier programmatic statements in the professional and personal travails that motivated them. This approach is adopted in order to display the intersection between biography and sociology in Mills's life and career, a feature that he made a central part of sociology's promise. The paper utilizes this approach to reflect on the reasons why The Sociological Imagination became so popular and was able to transcend Mills's general unpopularity at the time of his death: and as part of the explanation of why the dismissal of the book on its publication contrasts with the contemporary view, enabling it to transpose successfully to a time significantly different than at its writing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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20. Presidential Address How Does Economics Fit the Social World?
- Author
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Harvey, David R.
- Subjects
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ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences , *CIVILIZATION , *LAND use , *FOOD chains , *SOCIAL systems , *SYSTEMS theory , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper considers the present state of applied economics and the difficulties of integrating its findings and insights with those of other social sciences. The philosophical basis of social science is re-considered as a route to resolving these difficulties. Without a more integrated narrative about how our social systems work, applied economics, and all applied social sciences, run the substantial risk of being considered part of the world's problems, rather than offering serious routes to their solution. Some possible strands of a more coherent and integrated framework are outlined, which indicate some potentially fruitful avenues for further development. The paper concludes with illustrations of this outline for the food chain and land use agenda of the Research Councils' Rural Economy and Land Use (RELU) initiative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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21. The politics of engagement between Islam and the secular state: ambivalences of 'civil society'
- Author
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Turam, Berna
- Subjects
- *
ISLAM & civil society , *ISLAM , *POLITICAL science , *RELIGION & sociology , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The paper reveals contemporary transformations of the interaction between Islam and secular states from opposition to engagement. In-depth ethnographic evidence challenges the predominant juxtaposition of Islam against the secular state. Following micro-sites of interaction between the Gülen movement and the state from Turkey to Kazakhstan, my fieldwork revealed a continuum of engagements between them. The paper analyses the engagements ranging from contestation and negotiation to co-operation. The case illustrates the extent to which scholarly interest in opposition and clash has left a wide-ranging variety of state-Islam interaction understudied with regard to civil society. It also reveals the conditions under which effective Islamic horizontal organizations have provided the platforms of vertical engagements with the secular states. The major argument of the paper is that both civil and uncivil outcomes in the Muslim world are primarily shaped by the nature of state—Islam interaction. The evidence suggests that the key to understanding the relationship between Islam and civil society is the state.
- Published
- 2004
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22. The sociology of subjectivity, and the subjectivity of sociologists: a critique of the sociology of gender in the Australian family.
- Author
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Uhlmann, Allon J.
- Subjects
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SUBJECTIVITY , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *REFLEXIVITY , *FAMILIES , *GENDER - Abstract
In this era of reflexive sociology it is commonplace that subjectivity is of great sociological concern, and that the comprehension by social researchers of their own subject position is essential. Still, old habits die hard. Focusing on selected texts in the sociology of the Australian family, this paper traces the effects of failing to focus the sociological gaze on subjectivity and its variation across society. Highlighted are some patterns of analytic misconstruction of subjectivity, especially the substitution of measurement for a theory of practice, and the projection by sociologists of their own class-specific subjectivity onto society at large. Ultimately, this misconstruction turns works like those discussed in this paper into a powerful denial of alternative subjectivities, and a reinforcement of the socially dominant perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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23. The future of urban sociology: report of joint sessions of the British and American Sociological Associations.
- Author
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Perry, Beth and Harding, Alan
- Subjects
- *
URBAN sociology , *SOCIOLOGY , *URBAN studies , *SOCIAL sciences , *CITIES & towns - Abstract
This article reports on two joint sessions of the British and American Sociological Associations held during the course of 2001 as a first step toward more structured dialogue and debate between the two national associations. Drawing on the comments of a number of leading academics on both sides of the Atlantic, this paper presents a series of discussions about the role and future of urban sociology. It explores the challenges and opportunities offered to urban sociology by increasing interdisciplinarity and multidisciplinarity in the field of urban studies as a whole. It then explores the role of sociology in understanding the relationship between contemporary processes of globalization and urban change and the degree to which this constitutes a new dynamic core of sociological theory and research. The paper reveals that there are a variety of alternative futures for urban sociology and there would appear to be little agreement on one specific route, nor on how to get there. Urban sociology continues to face a variety of challenges and more debate on its future trajectory is clearly needed but it remains a vital and expanding sub–field. Cet article rend compte de deux sessions communes des associations de sociologie britannique et américaine qui ont eu lieu en 2001, premier stade vers un dialogue et un débat plus structurés entre les deux organismes nationaux. Partant des remarques d’un certain nombre de grands intellectuels des deux côtés de l’Atlantique, ce travail présente plusieurs discussions sur le rôle et l’avenir de la sociologie urbaine. Il examine les défis et possibilités que lui offrent l’interdisciplinarité et la pluridisciplinarité croissantes dans l’ensemble du domaine des études urbaines. Il explore ensuite comment la sociologie aide à comprendre la relation entre les processus contemporains de mondialisation et de changement urbain, et la mesure où peut ainsi émerger une nouvelle dynamique nodale pour la théorie et la recherche sociologiques. L’article expose plusieurs avenirs possibles de la sociologie urbaine, sans qu’il y ait apparemment d’accord sur une voie particulière ni sur le moyen d’y parvenir. La sociologie urbaine rencontre toujours de multiples défis et il faut manifestement approfondir les débats sur sa future trajectoire, mais elle demeure un sous–domaine à la fois crucial et en expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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24. Spatial Inequality and Diversity as an Emerging Research Area.
- Author
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Lobao, Linda and Saenz, Rogelio
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL structure , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper addresses spatial inequality as an emerging specialty area in sociology. Rural sociologists have long attended to spatial inequalities. The authors tend to view their work as uniquely centered on the rural experience, as opposed to occupying the forefront of spatializing stratification theory and of sociology as a whole. First the development of sociological interest in spatial inequality is discussed, providing an overview of factors that have contributed to a spatial trend in the study of stratification. Then, the implications for rural sociology are discussed, describing how rural sociologists contribute to research on spatial inequality, and distinguishes the approach of rural sociology from those of other subfields and disciplines. Finally, some examples of research in this emerging specialty area are highlighted by drawing from papers included in this issue. The authors call for the development of research based on qualitative approaches to provide deeper insights into the processes linking space with stratification, both from the perspective of people who are disadvantaged and from the standpoint of those who enjoy an advantage because of such a connection. They encourage the development of international and cross-national research on spatial inequality to broaden the understanding of the links between space and inequality.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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25. Disability, impairment or illness? The relevance of the social model of disability to the study of mental disorder.
- Author
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Mulvany, Julie
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness , *MENTAL health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHIATRY , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Sociologists appear to have abandoned the study of serious mental illness. This paper argues that the work of the disability theorists provides new directions for an analysis of the plight of people suffering from serious mental illness. Disability theory, revolving around a 'social approach to disability', redirects analysis from the individual to processes of social oppression, discrimination and exclusion. The application of the ideas of disability theorists to the study of mental ill health will orient research and theoretical development towards an analysis of the complexity and multiplicity of the social restrictions faced by people diagnosed as 'mentally ill', and the social disadvantage and oppression they face. A number of vigorous debates within the disability theory literature are examined. One debate addresses the political and theoretical implications of identifying the differences that exist between people with disabilities. A second debate examines the relative importance of including an analysis of impairment in the social approach to disability. Finally, the paper discusses the critique of medical sociology, linking illness with disability, which is advanced by some disability theorists. This debate is particularly concerned with the linking of illness with disability and the ideological and conceptual disadvantages of a focus on illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Connecting Research and Policymaking: Implications for Theory and Practice from the Family Impact Seminars.
- Author
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Bogenschneider, Karen, Olson, Jonathan R., Linney, Kirsten D., and Mills, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences , *POLICY sciences , *COMMUNICATION , *SOCIAL scientists , *SOCIOLOGY , *POLICY analysis - Abstract
This paper addresses a conundrum that merits scholarly attention--why social scientists' ability to generate high quality research has outpaced their ability to disseminate research into the policymaking process. The paper describes Family Impact Seminars, a series of seminars, briefing reports, and follow-up activities that provide up-to-date, solution-oriented information to state policymakers. In support of the proposed "three-communities" theory, the utilization of research in policymaking appears to depend upon several pragmatic practices and procedures, ten which are detailed in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The sociology of childbirth: an autobiographical journey through four decades of research.
- Author
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Oakley, Ann
- Subjects
- *
CHILDBIRTH , *FEMINISM , *HUMAN reproduction , *MEDICAL care , *OBSTETRICS , *PATIENTS , *PUBLIC opinion , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY , *TECHNOLOGY , *WORK , *EVIDENCE-based medicine ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
The sociology of childbirth emerged in the 1970s largely as a result of influences from outside sociology. These included feminism, maternity care activism, the increasing medicalisation of childbirth, and evidence-based health care. This paper uses the author's own sociological 'career' to map a journey through four decades of childbirth research. It demonstrates the importance of social networks and interdisciplinary work, particularly across the medical-social science divide and including cross-cultural perspectives, argues that the study of reproduction has facilitated methodological development within the social sciences, and suggests that childbirth remains on the periphery of mainstream sociological concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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28. Oakeshott, Wittgenstein, and the Practice of Social Science.
- Author
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Costelloe, Timothy M.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper investigates the concept of “sociology” and the logical limits which, it is argued, are imposed upon its practice by the nature of the subject matter it investigates. This thesis is developed, first, by examining Michael Oakeshott’s distinction between “technical” and “practical” knowledge, and his concept of “abridgment”. The view of human action which follows from this is then applied to sociological practice in order to show how the latter involves a unique sort of abridgment. Then, drawing on Ludwig Wittgenstein's conception of philosophy, it is argued that sociological inquiry has its own form of investigation which is most accurately termed “description”. Finally, Harvey Sacks' notion of “primitive, natural science” is critically examined as an account of social science which approximates most closely to the one being articulated here. The weakness of Sacks’ account, it is suggested, can be explained by his failure to appreciate the Oakeshottian insights about human action with which the argument began. The paper concludes by drawing out some implications of the proposed thesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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29. Children as Research Subjects: a Risky Enterprise.
- Author
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Hood, Suzanne, Kelley, Peter, and Mayall, Berry
- Subjects
- *
CHILD research , *RISK , *PARENTS , *SOCIOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper is based on a qualitative research study, Children, Parents and Risk. This study looks at the ways in which risks to children are understood and managed by children and parents. The paper focuses on two areas of the research—gaining access and interviewing—in order to show how the research process itself has constituted an important source of data on childhood and risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Secularization on Trial: In Defense of a Neosecularization Paradigm.
- Author
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Yamane, David
- Subjects
- *
CHURCH & state , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIETIES , *SOCIOLOGY , *SECULARIZATION , *THEORY - Abstract
According to its critics, the "old" secularization paradigm has been tried, convicted, and executed by recent scholarship in the social sciences of religion, and is being replaced by a "new" (postsecularization) paradigm which highlights the continued vitality of religion in modern societies. This paper argues that claims to have definitively refuted secularization theory are exaggerated. It mounts a defense of a neosecularization paradigm which retains the core insights of the old paradigm while incorporating criticisms leveled against the hubris and laziness of some deployments of the concept of "secularization." Following Chaves (1994), this paper argues that the core of neosecularization theory is the proposition that secularization means not the decline of religion but the declining scope of religious authority at the individual, organizational, and societal levels of analysis. Three exemplars of this perspective in the area of religion and politics are highlighted: the work of Hertzke (1988), Demerath and Williams (1992), and Casanova (1994). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Buddhism and the Definition of Religion: One More Time.
- Author
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Herbrechtsmeier, William
- Subjects
- *
BUDDHISM , *RELIGION , *UPAYA (Buddhism) , *CULTURE , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper argues that the belief in and reverence for superhuman beings cannot be understood as the chief distinguishing characteristic of religious phenomena. The consideration of Buddhism has always been central to the discussion of what religion is, and this paper focuses on the limitations of the human-superhuman dichotomy as it might be used to apply to Buddhist traditions. The argument makes three points: a) There are important sects of Buddhism that do not rely on reverence for superhuman beings, and the concept "superhuman" is difficult (if not impossible) to use in cross-cultural studies because of cultural variations in what it means to be human; b) the insistence that "philosophies" should be systematically distinguished from "religions" is arbitrary and culturally biased; and c) Buddhist doctrines that assert that reality is ultimately "nondual" provide the conceptual context for understanding superhuman beings in Mahayana, and this conceptuality is not consonant with superhuman definitions of religion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Social System of Mathematics and National Socialism: A Survey.
- Author
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Mehrtens, Herbert
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL systems , *MATHEMATICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *NATIONAL socialism , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIAL surveys , *SURVEYS , *SYSTEMS theory - Abstract
This paper offers an historical survey of problems arising in German mathematics during the rise and rule of National Socialism. Underlying this effort is the goal of developing a theoretical understanding of the social history of scientific disciplines in modern societies. The first part of the paper gives a brief description of the social system of mathematics and the characteristics of National Socialism. Second, an analysis of the background and structure of the attempt to construct a ‘German’ mathematics related to Nazi-ideology is given. This appears as an anti-modernist movement prompted by the rise of mathematical formalism. The basic relations between mathematical and political thought are analyzed and the reasons for the failure of the ‘German’ movement discussed. The third section examines the integration of mathematics into Nazi-German society, focusing on the twin processes of adaptation and resistance by professional societies. It is argued that social differentiation within the system of mathematics, as well as its modern cognitive and social universality, were preconditions of adaptation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Positivism-Humanism Debate in Sociology: A Reconsideration.
- Author
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Tibbetts, Paul
- Subjects
- *
POSITIVISM , *HUMANISM , *HUMANISTIC sociology , *SOCIAL theory , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
his paper examines the claim that positivism and humanism are mutually exclusive alternatives to the study and amelioration of human society. In the first part of the paper, eight theses normally associated with twentieth-century positivism are documented and explicated at length, ranging from the verification doctrine and the unified-language thesis to an emphasis on the nomological-deductive model of explanation and the fact-value distinction. In the second part the claims associated with a humanistic sociology are then examined, particularly those concerning scientism, the value-laden character of all scientific inquiry, and the relation between science and human emancipation. In the third part of the paper a distinction is between those claims which were definitive of positivism and those which were either peripheral or later amended by the leading positivists. It is then argued that a number of the criticisms leveled against positivism such as the latter's supposed affirmation of strict determinism, of scientism, and that normative considerations, being nondescriptive in character, are of little consequence, are entirely unfounded criticisms. Such claims were never an explicit part of the positivist program. On the contrary, it is argued that both contemporary positivism and humanism are motivated by parallel ideals of enlightenment-through-science, by a concern with reliable social knowledge as the basis for rational public policies, and—to quote Hempel—with ‘the broadening of our (moral) horizons.’ [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Induction and construction: Teetering between worlds.
- Author
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Gergen, Mary
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychologists , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The article comments on the paper of sociologist Serge Moscovici on social psychology. Moscovici believes that social psychology was once becoming an influential crossroads discipline, one that could shape and nurture other social sciences such as economics, anthropology and sociology. Moscovici's solution to the problem of how to become a powerful discipline seems to be along the lines of getting back to basics. Throughout his paper, Moscovici urges other social psychologists to consider the importance of creating rich descriptions garnered through careful, painstaking observations. In various ways an inductivist model of science within a positivist-empiricist framework informs Moscovici's views of the ideal social psychology. Moscovici seems to believe that the positivist-empiricist mode of scientific method is unchallenged within social psychology and sciences more generally. The author stresses the similarities between Moscovici's philosophy of science and that of the most traditional mainstream laboratory social psychologist.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Towards a sociology of child health.
- Author
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Mayall, Berry
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN'S health , *CHILD care , *SOCIAL sciences , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL medicine , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
This paper argues that children, as an important social group, repay study in connection with the sociology of health and illness. The paper outlines the neglect of children within medical sociology and goes on to open up a discussion towards a sociology of child health. The paper makes three main points. First, consideration of the case of health and illness helps understanding of children's social positioning as a minority group. Secondly, children present a clear case for considering people as embodied health care actors. Thirdly, taking account of children in the sociology of health requires rethinking the division of labour and inter-generational relationships within it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A reply to Rona Campbell and Sam Porter.
- Author
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Annandale, E. and Clark, J.
- Subjects
- *
FEMINISM , *SOCIOLOGY , *HUMAN reproduction , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *MIDWIVES , *MIDWIFERY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
In the article the authors comment on the views of sociologists Rona Campbell and Sam Porter, on a paper on feminist theory and the sociology of human reproduction written by them. The authors clarify that while feminists and midwives may hold ideas in common, feminist and midwifery practice are diverse and contested fields and there is no intrinsic affinity between the two. In their earlier paper they argued that feminism is not disinterested in its response to midwifery. It is further argued that differences which have become increasingly vociferous within feminism have tended to be neglected within the sociology of health and illness, and proposed that post-structuralist approaches might provide a fruitful, although certainly not unproblematic, counterpoint to a range of modernist feminist perspectives as they relate to gender and reproduction. In response to Campbell and Porter's criticism for ignoring recent midwifery and social science research on midwifery practice, it is clarified that the authors never intended to question midwifery's credentials in working with childbearing women.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Science, Power, Bodies: The Mobilization of Nature as State Formation.
- Author
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Carroll, Patrick
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY education , *SOCIOLOGY , *DATA transmission systems , *SOCIAL sciences , *ELECTRONIC systems , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper brings together recently developed perspectives m science studies and the historical sociology of state formation. It focuses on how scientific and government practices together construct the relationalities, identities, natures, and material environments of the bodies that constitute the modern state. The paper argues that the modem state is an effect of these practices, a techno- scientific political formation in which political government and scientific practice are woven together in a heterogeneous yet definitive network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Gender and Emotion: Beyond Stereotypes.
- Author
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Brody, Leslie R.
- Subjects
- *
GENDER , *DOMESTIC relations , *MARRIED people , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
The article focuses on stereotypes about gender differences in emotional communication or expression, as opposed to emotional experience or recognition. Expressiveness includes measurable changes in either the use of words, the facial and vocal characteristics associated with emotion, physiological arousal, or behaviors such as aggression or crying. The possibility that gender differences in emotional expression may be specific to certain situations is often ignored. For example, a series of recent widely cited papers have suggested that while females express dysphoric emotions more in words and facial expressions, males express these emotions more through physiological responses, as measured by increased heart rate, skin conductance, and blood pressure. Several papers are based on studies of couples' physiological responses, monitored during conflict situations in which wives confront husbands with feelings of marital dissatisfaction. In these conflict-laden interactions, husbands often show increased physiological arousal, while wives do not.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Crossing the Next Divide: A Response to Andy Pickering.
- Author
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Freudenburg, William R., Frickel, Scott, and Gramling, Robert
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences , *CIVILIZATION , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGISTS , *INTELLECTUALS - Abstract
The article responds to sociologist Andy Pickering's comments, partly because of the inherent intellectual stimulation of exchanging ideas with such a distinguished colleague, but partly also because of the need for much greater interchange between the two fields, the sociology of environment and technology, on the one hand and the sociology of science on the other. Pickering's comments raise three important points about the analysis of Iron Mountain, Michigan. First, he praises what he calls papers symmetry in noting the importance of physical⁄environmental as well as social factors in understanding social outcomes. Second, he argues that people have not taken this point far enough, in large part because, he believes, the social is not sufficiently at stake in papers. Third, he argues that a fruitful antidote would be to trace the evolution of actual practices, in detail, over time.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sociology: After the Linguistic and Multicultural Turns.
- Author
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Henry, Paget
- Subjects
- *
IDEOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL problems , *MULTICULTURALISM , *ETHNIC groups , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper offers an analysis of the continuing crisis in sociology that is different from those that have appeared in the literature. In contrast to the ideological and technical readings, it suggests that the origins of the crisis are to be found in the hermeneutic challenge that has resulted from the linguistic and multicultural turns. Both of these developments have given rise to new discourses within the academy that are competing with subfields such as the sociology of the arts and race/ethnic relations. The nature and impact of this new competition is examined in greater detail through the case of the sociology of race. The analysis reveals that these competitive challenges are hermeneutic in nature and not primarily technical or ideological. The paper concludes with some suggestions for crisis resolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Positivism and Interpretation in Sociology: Lessons for Sociologists from the History of Stress Research.
- Author
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Abbott, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
POSITIVISM , *SOCIOLOGY , *ANXIETY , *METHODOLOGY , *CULTURE , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper examines the relation between positivistic and interpretive sociology, using the stress research literature as a case study. Analyzing the cultural history of the stress concept, it uncovers four central themes: anxiety, performance, adjustment, and mentalism, Examining the self-criticismc made by scientific students of stress, it focuses on the problems of temporal order, confounding, and interaction. Comparison of the cultural and scientific literatures shows that while some of the positivists' complaints derive from general methodological choices, others come from inescapable aspects of the culture's general idea of stress. Considering the past development of stress research, the paper argues that positivism and interpretation have not been Cartesian opposites but interpenetrating fractals. It then speculates about what this relation implies for future positivistic studies, both in the stress literature and more generally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Hot crisis and media reassurance: A comparison of emerging diseases and Ebola Zaire.
- Author
-
Ungar, Sheldon
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL sciences , *DISEASE outbreaks , *SOCIOLOGY , *EBOLA virus disease , *COLLECTIVE behavior - Abstract
Drawing on the sociology of moral panic, this paper argues that the media will shift from alarming to reassuring coverage when a `hot crisis' portends a possible grass root panic. To determine whether this moderation effect follows from dread-inspiring events that are developing in unpredictable and potentially threatening ways, the paper compares newspaper and magazine coverage of emerging diseases with their coverage of Ebola Zaire. The results reveal that the mutation-contagion package, with its frightful account of emerging diseases, was quickly abandoned and subverted during the Ebola epidemic. In its place, the media fashion a containment package that uses a strategy of 'othering' to allay the fear. The conclusion discusses the flexibility in the tool kits used by the media to frame events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. `From Universal History to Historical Sociology': By J.A. Banks--a critical comment.
- Author
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Helmes-Hayes, R. C.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL research , *SOCIAL science research , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to challenge selected aspects of Professor J. A. Banks' discussion of Morris Ginsberg's view of the place of historical research in sociological work as they are presented in 'From Universal History to Historical Sociology' (BJS, rot. LX, no. 4, 1989:521-43). Specifically, it challenges Professor Banks' argument that Ginsberg believed that sociologists need not -- perhaps even should not -- do their own empirical research; that they should rely instead on historians and other disciplinary specialists for their data. It is true that Ginsberg was dismissive of a narrow positivist conception of empiricism and of sociology as a science more generally. At the same time, however, he saw empirical research (historical research included) as a necessary part of the sociological enterprise. Indeed, while the formulation of an all-inclusive theory of social development was the first purpose of general sociology, this was not possible without empirical contributions from a variety of smaller-scale specialized sociologies. Thus, it was not a question of historians doing one thing and sociologists another, but a question of emphasis. The paper concludes by noting that part of the difficulty in determining Ginsberg's position on this issue and other related theoretical matters is that, following Hobhouse, he styled himself as a 'rational empiricist'. According to this perspective, which from the dominant contemporary perspective incorrectly conflates philosophy and science (and sociology), the rational analysis of values can be described as a 'scientific' endeavour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Mathematical Sociology in Japan: Its Powerful Development and a Problem.
- Author
-
Sato, Yoshimichi
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL facts , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Mathematical sociology in Japan was born in the mid-1970s and has actively developed since then. Mathematical sociologists in Japan have studied various topics of mathematical sociology as well as of quantitative sociology. The Japanese Association for Mathematical Sociology ( JAMS) was established in 1986. It holds semi-annual conferences and publishes Sociological Theory and Methods, its official journal. Thus, the JAMS is a platform for mathematical sociologists in Japan to present and publish papers, contributing to the institutionalization of mathematical sociology in Japan. It has also co-sponsored five joint conferences with the Section on Mathematical Sociology of the American Sociological Association. Based on these activities, mathematical sociology in Japan could be judged to be vibrant domestically and internationally; it has a bright future. I argue, however, that mathematical sociologists in Japan have tended to confine themselves to areas where mathematical modeling is relatively easy. These areas are not necessarily attractive to sociologists in other fields. I propose that mathematical sociologists in Japan should tackle social phenomena that other sociologists think are critical to sociology so that they further contribute to advances in the discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Socio-cultural aspects of prompting student reflection in Web-based inquiry learning environments.
- Author
-
Furberg, A.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *CULTURE , *STUDENTS , *LEARNING , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper reports on a qualitative study of students' engagement with a Web-based inquiry environment aimed at prompting student reflection in processes of scientific inquiry. In order to demonstrate how prompts become structuring resources for students' scientific inquiry, detailed analyses of students' interaction processes are conducted. The students' written responses to the reflection prompts indicated a widespread use of a ‘copy and paste’ strategy. The analyses of student interaction deepen this finding and show that instead of participating in reflection activities, the students make use of these ‘copy and paste’ strategies in order to come up with ‘correct’ answers to the prompts. Further, the analyses indicate that the students' employment of these strategies can be seen as a response to what can be termed the institutional practices of schooling embedded within the design of the prompts. These findings are discussed and explored in accordance with findings from previous studies on prompting students' reflection in Web-based inquiry environments. The study demonstrates the value of a socio-cultural perspective for gaining a deeper understanding of students' engagement with Web-based learning environments. Such a perspective can give valuable insight into how to (re)design prompts, and how prompts can be productive parts of students' learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Spanish experience with German psychology prior to World War I.
- Author
-
Mülberger, Annette
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences , *LIBERALISM , *SOCIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
An increase in interest for German scientific psychology followed the rise of liberalism in late nineteenth-century Spain. This paper deals with Spanish scholars' endeavors to participate in German psychology: It outlines the intellectual and institutional background of Spanish preoccupation with German philosophy and psychology, and deals with the personal experience and testimony of two Spanish philosophers, Eloy Luis André and Juan Vicente Viqueira López, who traveled to Leipzig, Berlin, and Göttingen between 1909 and 1914 to gain firsthand experience in the nascent science of psychology in Germany at that time. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The changing meaning of disaster.
- Author
-
Furedi, Frank
- Subjects
- *
DISASTERS , *CURIOSITIES & wonders , *ACCIDENTS , *CULTURE , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Adverse events such as disasters are interpreted through a system of meaning provided by culture. Historically, research into society's response to disasters provides numerous examples of community resilience in face of adversity. However, since the 1980s, numerous researchers have challenged the previous optimistic accounts and argue that such incidents result in long-term damage to the community. It is claimed that community response to a disaster episode is far more likely to be defined by its vulnerability than its resilience. This new vulnerability paradigm of disaster response is underpinned by the belief that contemporary technologically driven disasters have a peculiarly destructive outcome. This paper explores the changing conceptualisation of adversity. It suggests that the shift from the expectation of resilience to that of vulnerability is best understood as an outcome of a changing cultural conceptualisation of adversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Between the devil and the deep blue sea: nationality, power and symbolic trade-offs among evangelical Protestants in contemporary Northern Ireland.
- Author
-
MITCHELL, CLAIRE and TODD, JENNIFER
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *NATIONAL character , *NATIONALISM , *POWER (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL sciences , *POLITICAL science , *SOCIOLOGY , *EVANGELICALISM , *SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
National identity is a symbolically complex configuration, with shifts of emphasis and reprioritisations of content negotiated in contexts of power. This paper shows how they occur in one post-conflict situation – Northern Ireland – among some of the most extreme of national actors – evangelical Protestants. In-depth interviews reveal quite radical shifts in the content of their British identity and in their understanding of and relation to the Irish state, with implications for their future politics. The implications for understanding ethno-religious nationalism, nationality shifts and the future of Northern Ireland are drawn out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The intellectuals and capitalism.
- Author
-
Fontaine, Philippe
- Subjects
- *
IMPERIALISM & society , *INTELLECTUALS , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *TWENTIETH century , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
The article focuses on the paper "British sociology and public intellectuals: consumer society and imperial decline," by Bryan Turner. Philippe Fontaine reviews the fact that sociologist have failed to document the gradual fall Great Britain from world power status, and discusses R. W. Cornell's views on the connection between empire and sociology. The anti-intellectual sentiment seen by Turner in Great Britain is critiqued, as well as Turner's insistence that social scientists chose certain topics to structure their investigations.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Notes to contributors.
- Subjects
- *
PERIODICAL publishing , *PUBLISHING , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences , *PERIODICALS - Abstract
This article presents guidelines to contributors of the "British Journal of Sociology." Papers submitted for publication are normally read by at least two assessors as well as by one of the Editors. The Editor's decision will be final. Articles submitted to the journal should be an original piece of work, not been published before, and not being considered for publication elsewhere in its final form either in printed or electronic form.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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