154 results
Search Results
2. A Note on "Scholarliness" and "Impact"
- Author
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Peritz, Bluma C.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,PUBLISHING ,SOCIAL sciences ,AUTHORS - Abstract
A moderate but consistent positive correlation was found between the number of citations in a paper and the number of times it is cited. This result refers to a collection of papers published in the American Sociological Review and the American Journal of Sociology in 1972 and 1973. The following variables were controlled: journal, year of publications, subject category of paper, number of authors, and seniority of author. Several explanations of this finding are suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Call for Papers Annual Meeting.
- Subjects
- *
RELIGION , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIETIES , *SOCIALIZATION , *ANNUAL meetings - Abstract
The article presents information on the annual meeting of the society of scientific study of religion at Vista International Hotel Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This year's theme of religious marginality encourages participants to go beyond core beliefs and practices of members of mainline churches to the expressions of interest or disinterest in religion that are less common religious experience, mixed intermarriage, unclear interpreting "don't know" responses to questions on belief, nonestablishment (religion among street people), or rejections of religion atheism and apostasy. List of topics related to this year's theme would include, denominational switching and conversion, sources of membership change in the mainline churches, apostates and returnees, new nones (apostates) vs. stable nones with no prior ties, inter-religious marriage and religion of children, divorce, religious socialization of children, religiosity and the life cycle, Inter-racial marriage and religion and the Black Church.
- Published
- 1990
4. The ageing farming workforce and the health and sustainability of agricultural communities: A narrative review.
- Author
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O'Meara, Peter
- Subjects
AGING ,AGRICULTURAL laborers ,AGRICULTURE ,CINAHL database ,HEALTH status indicators ,LABOR supply ,MEDLINE ,SOCIOLOGY ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Objective: To review and synthesise research related to the ageing farming workforce influence on the health and sustainability of agricultural communities. Design: Using the PRISMA framework as a guide, the CINHAL and Medline databases were searched. Search 1 used the key search terms of ageing OR aging, farm*, workforce. Search 2 used health, sustainability and 'agricultural OR farm communit*. Search 3 combined Searches 1 and 2. Search 4 followed journal citations to identify other relevant articles. A process of narrative synthesis was applied to the results through the prism of rural social capital that described the current state of knowledge and understanding under four themes. Result: Database searches and searching of citations identified 16 contemporary articles. Seven of the papers were from Australia, and the balance from five other high‐income countries. The four that themes emerged are: vulnerabilities of ageing farmers; economic and climatic drivers; social capital and sustainability; and integrative strategies, that might offer a way forward. Conclusion: Integrating these forces of nature, economics and sociology to address the ageing farming workforce and the associated health and sustainability of agricultural communities remains a major challenge for researchers, governments, the agricultural sector and rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Indigenization of American Sociology in Japan: The Contribution of Kazuko Tsurumi.
- Author
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Yazawa, Shujiro
- Subjects
HISTORY of sociology ,SOCIOLOGY ,IMPERIALISM ,MILITARISM ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,FUNCTIONALISM (Social sciences) ,TWENTIETH century ,WESTERN civilization ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This paper is an investigation of attempts at endogenization and indigenization in the history of sociology in Japan. The author begins by presenting a short history of Japanese sociology. While the issues of endogenization and indigenization had been raised in the 1910s, imperialism and the militarization of the Emperor state and society blocked this form of development. Japanese social sciences have thus mainly followed the model of Western social sciences. The issue of indigenization gained attention after World War II and especially after the late 1960s, which was a time of reflection on the extreme influence of American sociology. In this context, this paper investigates the development of Kazuko Tsurumi's sociology, which is one of the best examples of work that deals with the issue of indigenization. Tsurumi analyzes social change from pre‐World War II to post‐World War II Japan by drawing on sociological functionalism. However, Tsurumi suggests that Kunio Yanagita's theory of folklore and ethnology provides a stronger explanatory framework than functionalism, and contends that Kumagusu Minaka has developed an approach rooted in East Asia. Tsurumi advances this indigenous development theory based on the work of Yanagita and Minakata, and at the same time internationalizes this theory. This paper concludes that Tsurumi's theory is an important medium between Western sociology and Eastern sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. School racial‐ethnic socialization of multiracial K12 students: A systematic review of the literature using MultiCrit.
- Author
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Peng, Jackie Matise
- Subjects
ETHNIC-racial socialization ,RACE ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
The growing multiracial population in the United States necessitates a shift in research attention to include mixed‐race youth. While racial‐ethnic socialization (RES) research has predominantly focused on family contexts, this review highlights the role of schools in shaping the RES socialization of mixed‐race youth in the United States. Existing literature indicates that RES plays a vital role for multiracial children and adolescents by helping them navigate their complex identities, promoting a sense of belonging, and enhancing mental health outcomes. However, studies explicitly exploring RES for mixed‐race children in elementary and secondary schools are limited, and RES is often theorized without structural conceptualizations of race and racism. Using Critical Multiracial Theory (MultiCrit) as a theoretical lens, this review investigates the content and messages conveyed to mixed‐race youth at school. It considers transmissions from various sources (e.g., curriculum, teachers, peers) to uncover implications for the well‐being of mixed‐race students. This paper contributes to scholarship on school RES by considering how the process unfolds for the fastest‐growing demographic of students in the US (multiracials) using a sociohistorical approach (MultiCrit). The review concludes with future directions for researchers studying multiracial youth in K‐12 schools and considerations for practitioners working with multiracial students in school settings. Keywords: multiracial youth, mixed‐race, K‐12 schools, RES, MultiCrit [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. African American Couples in the 21st Century: Using Integrative Systemic Therapy (IST) to Translate Science into Practice.
- Author
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Chambers, Anthony L.
- Subjects
CULTURE ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,MARRIAGE ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,SEX distribution ,SOCIOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY of Spouses ,TRUST ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,THEORY ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,MARITAL satisfaction ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,COUPLES therapy - Abstract
Copyright of Family Process is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Editor's Introduction.
- Subjects
BIG business ,SOCIOLOGY ,PROTECTIONISM - Abstract
The article the "American Journal of Economics and Sociology" and the diverse range of topics that is presented in the current issue. The first article focuses on a study conducted by C. Wright Mills and Melville Ulmer who were commissioned by the United States Congress to review large corporations and their impact on society. Another paper focuses on the growth of special interest protectionism during the early 19th century. The last paper discusses and defends the position that economic writer Max Weber deserves the title "economic sociologist."
- Published
- 2006
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9. 'Laboratory Talk' in U.S. Sociology, 1890-1930: The Performance of Scientific Legitimacy.
- Author
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Owens, B. Robert
- Subjects
HISTORY of sociology ,SOCIOLOGY methodology ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL science methodology ,LABORATORIES ,SCIENTIFIC method ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper examines one aspect of early twentieth century debates over the meaning of scientific methodology and epistemology within the social sciences: the tendency of sociologists to invoke 'laboratory' as a multivalent concept and in reference to diverse institutions and sites of exploration. The aspiration to designate or create laboratories as spaces of sociological knowledge production was broadly unifying in early American sociology (1890-1930), even though there was no general agreement about what 'laboratory' meant, nor any explicit acknowledgment of that lack of consensus. The persistence of laboratory talk in sociology over decades reflects the power of 'laboratory' as a productively ambiguous, legitimizing ideal for sociologists aspiring to make their discipline rigorously scientific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. American Sociology: History and Racially Gendered Classed Knowledge Reproduction.
- Author
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Padilla Wyse, Jennifer
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,HISTORY & sociology ,HISTORY of the theory of knowledge ,POWER (Social sciences) ,GENDER & society ,RACE & society ,HUMANITY ,HISTORY - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore how racially gendered classed power-relations structure history, knowledge and American Sociology's historical memory and disciplinary knowledge production. In order to do so, this paper will 1) utilize Cabral's (1970) theory of history to center humanity as historically developed into a racially gendered classed capitalist world-system, 2) employ intersectionality as a heuristic device to see how knowledge is manipulated to normalize dehumanization as well as to perpetuate exploitation and privilege by denying ' Othered' ' knowledges, and lastly 3) sociologically imagine this racially gendered classed process in the 'institutional-structure' of American Sociology by exploring the ancestry of the concept of 'intersectionality.' In all this paper argues 1) American Sociology under theorizes history, a central aspect of the sociological imagination and production of new sociological knowledge, 2) American Sociology reproduces a dehumanized theory of history per Marx's 'historical materialism' and 3) the structure of American Sociology's knowledge is racially gendered classed, as illustrated in the collective memory of the concept of 'intersectionality.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A Method From the 'Lifeworld': Some Possibilities for Person Centred Planning for Children in Care.
- Author
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Houston, Stan
- Subjects
CHILD care ,LEGAL status of children ,CHILD care services ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper describes a method for working with children who are the subjects of care planning and review under the Children Act 1989. The person centred planning method, as it is termed, has been well established in working with adults with special needs but can be extrapolated to encounters with children. It focuses on three fundamental areas: relationship, meaning and narrative. In underscoring these areas, the method restrains the bureaucracy and experience of stigma that is often present for those residing in state care. On a wider plane, the paper argues that the method stands as a veritable example of Habermas's ideas concerning the application of communicative rationality and discursive democracy in social life. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Old Wine in Old Bottles--So What Is Wrong with That? Some Observations on Metatheory in Rural Sociology.
- Author
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Bealer, Robert C.
- Subjects
METATHEORY ,RURAL sociology ,OCCUPATIONS ,HYPOTHESIS ,METHODOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Presidential addresses to the Rural Sociological Society fall into two basic types. Some persons have chosen to deliver a paper which continues the kind of substantive interests at the core of their particular careers. In this way the article is not too different than any other of the person's efforts. Perhaps the more characteristic mode is to step outside "the usual" and appraise where new challenges may be arising for rural sociology, where old problems remain and, in general, to focus on issues pertinent largely to the profession as such. This is so for the simple reason that the central concern of the author long has been with metatheory or metasociology. The nature of the beast, brings "professional" matters under scrutiny. Through the rubric of metatheory his goal is to examine and hopefully clarify some of the assumptions which underlines substantive propositions. The assumptions that are perhaps most inviting for inquiry are those involving methodology. This is because of rural sociology in the United States has a methodological centrality.
- Published
- 1983
13. Farm Size, Farm Structure, Energy and Climate: An Alternate Ecological Analysis of United States Agriculture.
- Author
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Gilles, Jere
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,CENSUS ,FARM size ,QUALITY ,ENERGY consumption ,SOCIOLOGY ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The Census of Agriculture is an important source of data for persons interested in studying the structure of agriculture. The census has been used to study agriculture and quality of life in Kansas recently and aggregated state level data was used to describe the relationship between farm size, agriculture and energy consumption. As sociological interest in agriculture, grows, it is likely that the Census of Agriculture will become the source of many more studies. Unfortunately, the units of analysis reported in the Census of Agriculture like-aggregate national, state and county statistics-create problems for those who use them for sociological purposes. This short article will illustrate some of the problems inherent in the use of census materials by reexamining some of the data used on recent papers on energy and agriculture. A serious difficulty posed by the use of census material for sociological research stems from the fact that census data are aggregated on the bases of political units like states and counties.
- Published
- 1980
14. Educational Policy-Making and the Relative Autonomy of the State: The Case of Occupational Educational in the Community College.
- Author
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Dougherty, Kevin
- Subjects
UNITED States education system ,POLICY sciences ,EDUCATION policy ,SOCIAL policy ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Over the past twenty years, the expansion and differentiation of education in the United States have been explained in many different ways, but most explanations give little or no importance to the role of government officials pursuing their own interests. And all ignore how business's and students' influence over educational policy is due less to their direct participation in policy-making than to their ideological influence and possession of resources that policy-makers covet. In this paper, I use the case of the massive expansion of occupational education in the community college to develop an alternative explanation of educational policy-making. This analysis draws on, but also critiques, recent work in political sociology on the roles and interests of the "state managers" who head major segments of the state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The Effect of Divorce on Suicide in Japan: A Time Series Analysis, 1950-1980.
- Author
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Stack, Steve
- Subjects
CAUSES of death ,VIOLENT deaths ,SOCIOLOGY ,INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
The article explores the relationship with data from a nation with a substantially different social context, Japan. American research on suicide has been based largely on American samples. Little is known about whether the results of this work, such as the link between divorce and suicide, will be replicated for nations with substantially different institutional and cultural structures. The present paper tests the marital integration theory of suicide with data from Japan. Briefly, the marital integration theory holds that as bonds to marriage weaken, suicide risk increases. Further, the kinship system in Japan is apparently more integrated than it is in the United States. For example, in Japan 37.3% of the elderly lived in three-generation households compared to only 0.5% of the elderly in the United States. Durkheim's theory of social integration and suicide emphasizes the subordination of the individual to group life as a prophylactic against suicide. Individualism in family life was emerging as the pattern for the future at the time of Durkheim's study. It is anticipated that a rising divorce rate should affect suicide risk for several groups: divorced persons; separated persons who are contemplating divorce; married persons with severe marital problems; and the children in such families.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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16. Ruth Shonle Cavan: An Intellectual Portrait.
- Author
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Ferdinand, Theodore N.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,WRITING ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
This article explores the life and career of sociology writer Ruth Shonle Cavan. Her career is the tale of an extraordinary person seeking and finding congenial outlets for her talents. Her secret seems to be a blend of sound intuition, a probing, inquiring mind, solid preparation, and strong motivation. She combines a clear sense of what is important with a strong drive to understand key issues, to coordinate her insights with others, and finally to fashion the whole into a well crafted book or paper. As a young girl in Tuscola, Illinois, Cavan wrote incessantly. In high school, she wrote for a school literary magazine. In 1916, she entered Millikin University in Decatur, Illinois to become a teacher, but again she was drawn to writing. She enrolled in courses in fiction and expository writing, entered another essay competition, and won first prize. Sociology was more than an outlet for her talents. It provided as well a new way of viewing human beings. She began to see that everyone is subject to vast structural and cultural forces that offer little opportunity for personal control.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
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17. Why American Sociology Needs Biographical Sociology- European Style.
- Author
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Jindra, Ines W.
- Subjects
SOCIAL structure ,SOCIOLOGY ,BIOGRAPHICAL methods in sociology ,HERMENEUTICS ,CULTURE - Abstract
Life story methods in Europe commonly belong to the field of biographical sociology. This paper points out that biographical sociology is missing from American sociology and describes in-depth two well-known methods in this field in Europe, the narrative interview and objective hermeneutics. The absence of biographical sociology from U.S. sociology should be remedied, it is argued, for the following reasons: First, an analysis of biographical patterns could counteract the heavy emphasis on social structure in American sociology and enrich certain subfields within it. For example, some of the concepts used in European biographical sociology, such as the concept of the 'trajectory' can be related to conceptions of agency set forth by American and British sociologists and thus enrich sociology overall. Second, biographical sociology can help counteract the heavy orientation towards quantitative research in American sociology without falling into the pitfalls of purely interpretive methodologies. And third, biographical sociology can significantly enrich the still missing link between culture and cognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Social Survey Research.
- Author
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Tamano, Kazushi
- Subjects
SOCIAL surveys ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL science research ,WORLD War II ,EMPIRICISM ,PRAGMATISM ,METAPHYSICS - Abstract
In this paper, we look at the history of social survey development in Japanese sociology. First, the history of social research in Japan before World War II is explored. Second, the introduction of survey research to Japan during the American occupation after World War II is examined, and third, the present state and roles of social survey research in Japanese sociology is discussed. Social research was introduced as an administrative tool for the government. Sociology and social research were developed under British empiricism and American pragmatism, but Japanese academia has been based on a metaphysical approach. Social research introduced as a practical tool long had difficulty in being accepted by Japanese academia. For this reason, most sociologists in universities did not use social survey research for practical purposes, but pursued qualitative methodologies for analyzing data to gain academic prestige even after Social Stratification and Mobility (SSM) and Sabro Yasuda's research projects spread social survey methods in the field of Japanese sociology. Such academics did not think that findings acquired through qualitative case studies had to be confirmed through quantitative data to serve a practical purpose, nor did they believe that quantitative data could be better understood when examined along side qualitative data. Social survey methods have been opposed by those who have favored case-study analysis methods in Japanese sociology. Needless to say, this opposition is fruitless. I propose that professional sociologists in Japanese universities should use social survey research for practical problems more frequently. This is the best way to establish sociology and social research as a science in Japanese society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Gender and Value Orientations-What's the Difference!? The Case of Japan and the United States.
- Author
-
Levey, Tania and Silver, Catherine
- Subjects
SOCIOECONOMICS ,GROUP identity ,GENDER ,VALUE orientations ,SOCIOLOGY ,CROSS-cultural differences ,FEMINISM - Abstract
This paper analyzes gendered social identity in Japan and the United States, countries with comparable postindustrial economic systems but distinct cultural traditions. Using national surveys (1995), we find gender differences in value orientations to be neither systematic nor consistent. They often disappeared after controlling for demographic and human-capital variables, though not so often for Japan. Other variables proved more important predictors of values than gender, although in different ways in Japan and the United States. We conclude by reassessing the use of the term gender in social research and the cultural meaning of gender relations by addressing the feminist concerns with issues of gender location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Public Concern with Animal Well-Being: Place, Social Structural Location, and Individual Experience.
- Subjects
HUMAN-animal relationships ,ANIMAL welfare ,ANIMAL social behavior ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
While sociologists and the public at large are increasingly interested in the life conditions of animals, conceptual and empirical development of the topic is limited. This paper seeks to further develop the sociological research on attitudes toward animal well-being. We build on insights from contemporary stratification theory to explain the nature of animal attitudes and their determinants. We also extend past work by examining a broader range of factors related to attitudes about animal well being, focusing on place, other social structural factors, and individuals' unique animal-related experiences. Data are from a survey of over 4,000 Ohio residents conducted in 2002. We find that childhood experience has the greatest place-based effect on attitudes. Other findings highlight the importance of social structural factors, suggesting support for the "underdog hypothesis." Women, people experiencing economic hardship, those with less education, younger and middle aged people, and blacks tend to be more concerned with animal well-being. Individualized, experiential variables are also important. Our results reflect the complexity of attitudes about animals and point to the need for greater sociological attention to factors left largely unexplored in previous studies, including childhood place-based factors, economic hardship, and individuals' unique animal-related experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Legitimacy and Adoption of a Scientific Biological Control Program: an Institutional Analysis of Hoddle.
- Author
-
PROFFITT, W. TREXLER
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,SOCIOLOGY ,PESTICIDES - Abstract
Describes the legitimacy and adoption of a scientific biological program in the U.S. Emphasis on the improvement of organizational sociology and environmental policy; Role of social institutions on the development of science of biological control; Enhancement of the pesticide development.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Framing Processes, Cognitive Liberations, and NIMBY Protest in the U.S. Chemical-Weapons Disposal Conflict.
- Author
-
Futrell, Robert
- Subjects
SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL conflict ,CHEMICAL weapons disposal ,SOCIAL psychology ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper offers elaborations on current knowledge about social-movement framing processes and cognitive liberation, especially regarding technical controversies and not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) protest. The social-constructionist lens of the framing perspective also allows refinements in conventional explanations of NIMBY conflicts. Attention is given to the dynamics of emergence, continuity, and change in framing strategies over time in controversy regarding the U.S. Army's chemical-weapons disposal program. I focus specifically on dynamics involved in the development of cognitive liberation, particularly the framing difficulties that occur in the context of cognitive ambiguities produced by an "information haze." These ambiguities create problems for developing and linking the diagnostic, prognostic, and motivational elements of collective-action frames. I also attend to frame transformation, explaining how transformation may be both animated and constrained by a movement's opponent. I conclude that NIMBY is only one possible framing and can be transformed as the context of the dispute shifts. Moreover, framing activities in technical disputes may be particularly difficult due to the role of scientific rhetoric and experts in interpreting risks and shaping understandings of the situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Forgotten Movement: The Vietnam Antiwar Movement.
- Author
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Fendrich, James Max
- Subjects
PEACE movements ,SOCIAL movements ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Utilizing recent research and monographs from participants and observers, this paper reports on the underanalyzed Vietnam antiwar movement. Key events are placed in a historical context that help to explain the origins of the movement. Particular attention is given to the various responses of the state to the challengers and the complex interrelationships with the media. As the antiwar movement grew and developed, there were multiple factors that contributed to solidarity and factionalism within the movement. Despite state repressive actions and internal factionalism, the movement was successful in helping to end the war. The effects on U.S. policies were more indirect than direct. The antiwar movement mobilized millions of citizens to public protest. The demonstrations helped to shift public opinion away from supporting the war and activated third parties to question and demand an end to war policies. The political system did respond to the antiwar movement’s demands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Civic Community in Small-Town America, How Civic Welfare is Influenced by Local Capitalism and Civic Engagement.
- Author
-
Tolbert, Charles M., Irwin, Michael D., Lyson, Thomas A., and Nucci, Alfred R.
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,PUBLIC welfare ,CAPITALISM ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
ABSTRACT The aims of this paper are twofold: first, to gain a fuller understanding of factors that foster community cohesion and contribute to the residents' social and economic well-being; and, second, to move beyond previous research that used larger spatial units such as states, counties, or aggregates of counties and to focus instead on American small towns (population 2,500–20,000). The data on small towns are drawn from public-use files and from confidential microdata from various economic censuses. From these sources we construct measures of locally oriented firms, self-employment, business establishments that serve as gathering places, and associations. The local capitalism and civic engagement variables generally perform as hypothesized; in some cases they are related quite strongly to civic welfare outcomes such as income levels, poverty rates, and nonmigration rates. We discuss the advantages and disadvantages of working with place-level data and suggest some strategies for subsequent work on small towns and other incorporated places. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. When ecology and sociology meet: The contributions of Edward A. Ross.
- Author
-
Gross, Matthias
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL sociology ,SOCIOLOGY ,HUMAN ecology ,HISTORY of sociology - Abstract
Edward A. Ross, a key figure in the early history of American sociology, developed a conceptualization of natural and social changes of the material environment that is virtually forgotten today. In this paper, these topics are discussed and located vis-à-vis Ross's intellectual contemporaries and their general take on the nature/society relationship. It is argued that ecological and sociological ideas in the early twentieth century influenced one another and, in the case of Ross, produced a perspective of social change that tried to include the dynamics of nature. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Shaping Schooling Success: Religious Socialization and Educational Outcomes in Metropolitan Public Schools.
- Author
-
Regnerus, Mark D.
- Subjects
RELIGION & sociology ,RELIGION in the public schools ,EDUCATION ,PUBLIC schools ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper analyzes religious socialization as it relates to schooling success. propose and test a multilevel model of involvement in church activities as providing integration and motivation toward schooling success among metropolitan U.S. public high school sophomores. Results indicate that respondents' participation in church activities is related to heightened educational expectations, and that these more intensely religious students score higher on standardized math/reading tests; even while controlling for variables that often show religious effects to be spurious. The hypothesis that church involvement's effect varies by ecological context - it being a better predictor for students in poorer neighborhoods than average or wealthy neighborhoods - was not supported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. "Whistleblower" or "Renegade": Definitional Contests in an Official Inquiry.
- Author
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Nichols, Lawrence T.
- Subjects
- *
WHISTLEBLOWING , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper addresses the interpretive dynamics of official inquiries. Beginning with an ideal-typical sketch of congressional investigations, the discussion traces a portrayal of public problems by a committee of the House of Representatives. This leads to the analysis of a hearing in which committee factions struggled to define an Air Force administrator as a "whistleblower" or a "renegade." The hearing is understood as a "certification ceremony" that rhetorically transformed staff, discoveries into allegedly definitive evidence, it is concluded that the paper's conceptual approach can be applied to diverse inquiries that combine documentary research with interrogation of witnesses to generate authoritative findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Intergenerational solidarity in the creation of science: The Ross-Sorokin correspondence, 1921-1931.
- Author
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Nichols, Lawrence T.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIOLOGY , *HISTORY of sociology , *SOLIDARITY , *SCIENCE - Abstract
The paper examines the relationship between two seminal figures in American sociology, in terms of its contribution to the movement to establish the science within the academic world. Using archival data, the analysis shows how Edward A. Ross and Pitirim A. Sorokin became acquainted and subsequently collaborated to expand the intellectual horizons and institutional base of sociology. Their collaboration is understood as intergenerational solidarity, which the paper argues is fundamental to an understanding of both the past and the future of organized sciences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Impact of Controlled Access Highways on Population Growth in Pennsylvania Nonmetropolitan Communities, 1940--1970.
- Author
-
Humphrey, Craig R. and Sell, Ralph R.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,RURAL sociology ,SOCIAL science research ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,POPULATION geography ,POPULATION - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of controlled access highways on nonmetropolitan population growth between 1940 and 1970 in the state of Pennsylvannia. Minor civil divisions corrected for boundary changes were used as areal units in the research. With a longitudinal analysis, the authors observed the demographic growth of nonmetropolitan places before and after controlled access highways were opened as well as variations in the impact of the said highways from decade to decade.
- Published
- 1975
30. From House to Haig: Private Life and Public Style in American Foreign Policy Advisers.
- Author
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Elms, Alan C.
- Subjects
POLITICAL consultants ,CONSULTANTS ,POLITICIANS ,SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Personal history may determine the individual's style of expressing political beliefs as much as or more than it influences the beliefs themselves. Connections between private life history and public political style have most often been studied in U.S. presidents. However, studies of prominent foreign-policy advisers can be just as useful for an understanding of how individual life history shapes the expression of political beliefs. This paper examines areas of apparent linkage between private life and public style in four of the most prominent Amen can foreign policy advisers of the 20th century: I-louse, Dulles, Kissinger, and Haig. Three styles of dealing with foreign policy issues-Machiavellianism, ego-idealism, and authoritarianism-are considered in relation to the public and private behavior of each man. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Tempest–Tost: Exile, Ethnicity, and the Politics of Rescue.
- Author
-
Rose, Peter I.
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,EXILES ,SOCIOLOGY ,ETHNICITY ,ALTRUISM - Abstract
Refugees are individuals forced to flee from their homelands because of categorical persecution or because they are bystanders caught in the crossfire of war or civil strife. Such involuntary exile often leads to alienation in the most literal sense of the term. Whether expellees, escapees, or displaced persons, refugees share a common fate and, often, a common destiny: those who are dispossessed are dependent on others to provide care, succor, protection, and assistance. Yet responses to their plight are almost invariably highly selective, the quality of mercy being strained by considerations other than pure altruism. This paper, a commentary on the sociology of exile, attempts to convey the sense and significance of estrangement and responses to it in both historical and con temporary contexts. Early sections deal with concepts and concerns; later ones examine United States refugee policies and practices relating to exile, ethnicity, and the politics of rescue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Recent History and the Emerging Reality of American Sociological Theory: A Metatheoretical Interpretation.
- Author
-
Ritzer, George
- Subjects
METATHEORY ,SOCIAL theory ,PARADIGMS (Social sciences) ,PSYCHOANALYTIC interpretation ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper has several objectives. First, it demonstrates the utility of employing an array of metatheoretical tools (paradigm, paradigm bridging micro -- macro, integrated paradigm, theoretical syntheses) to analyze the recent history of mainstream American sociological theory. Second, it shows that we have moved through three rather well defined epochs in sociological theory over the last three decades and are entering a fourth. Third, it demonstrates that the trend in recent years has been away from theoretical separatism and exclusivity, and toward theoretical synthesis and integration. Finally, and relatedly, the integrated sociological paradigm that I sketched a decade ago, or at least something very much like it, it shown to be now much closer to being a reality, perhaps even a defining reality, in sociological theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Local and Extra-Local Orientations in the Metropolis.
- Author
-
Oropesa, R. S.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY life ,COMMUNITIES ,HUMAN ecology ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The debate over the "community question" has generated several perspectives on the sources of ties to the territorial community in modern society. This paper attempts to empirically assess the utility of each model for predicting the number of ties to the local community and extra-local area, using data on voluntary association memberships in Seattle. Results indicate that the "community of limited liability" perspective is most accurate in predicting the importance of social, economic, and temporal investments for local memberships, and social position for extra-local memberships.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Knowledge and the Practice of Sociology.
- Author
-
Freidson, Eliot
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIOLOGY of knowledge ,OCCUPATIONS ,EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
Noting that sociology, like other disciplines, usually discusses itself as if its content-its body of knowledge-were created by a wholly intellectual process, I am adopting in this paper the approach of the sociology of knowledge by emphasizing the "existential factors" that influence knowledge. I employ the poorly developed concept of occupation, and argue that in the United States academic disciplines like sociology are best analyzed as professions, which are organized occupations. American professions sustain their present position by the functional differentiation of members into separate administrative, research or scholarship, and practice roles. Practice roles serving lay clients or patrons provide the basic economic support of the profession as a whole. The characteristic practice role of most academic arts and science disciplines is teaching. Using sociology and its special position in the under-graduate curriculum as an example, I suggest that the contingencies of teaching influence what knowledge is used, underlie at least part of the public image of the discipline, and determine some of what becomes part of the published corpus of the discipline's knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Novel Reading of Nineteenth-Century Wales: A Reply to Stark, Finke, and Iannaccone.
- Author
-
Bruce, Steve
- Subjects
RELIGION ,SOCIOLOGY ,HEGEMONY ,RELIGIOUS diversity ,HUMAN behavior - Abstract
The article presents a reply of the author regarding views expressed on his religious thoughts. He says the journal article is not a useful format for pursuing disputes involving both major issues of the logic of social explanation and technical considerations of data preparation and analysis. The author says that social considerations often seem more germane than the rational choices of autonomous individuals. Diversity of the new world may be more apparent than real is that some of it is due to racial and ethnic duplication. His essay questioned the stereotypes of old world as religious hegemony and new world as competitive pluralism. It identified considerable diversity within British religion and raised the point that the religious diversity of the United States as a whole may not be reflected at the local levels where choices are made. He also pointed that in a general critique of rational choice models of human behavior, he has suggested that they represent an economics rather than a sociology view of human behavior.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Edgework, institutions and enhanced interrogation.
- Subjects
RISK-taking behavior ,TORTURE ,SOCIOLOGY ,WAR ,SOCIAL workers ,VIOLENCE ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
The Enhanced Interrogation programme was a medicalised interrogation programme that was designed by the United States in the wake of 9/11. It is now widely recognized that the Enhanced Interrogation programme engaged in some activities that were, at the least, tantamount to torture. The programme was designed by Psychologists and overseen by other professionals, including medical professionals. This article argues that the Enhanced Interrogation programme displayed many of the features of what Sociologists refer to as Edgework. It demonstrated voluntary risk‐taking by health and other professionals; this risk‐taking pressed up against catastrophic outcomes across multiple dimensions; risks were taken for the purposes of escaping a death‐saturated macrosocial context; and the health professionals in the programme were highly skilled. The article argues that a new form of Edgework can be detected by studying the programme, which the article refers to as 'Institutional Edgework'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Three Phases of Bourdieu's U.S. Reception: Comment on Lamont.
- Author
-
Lizardo, Omar
- Subjects
COGNITION ,CULTURAL capital ,FIELD theory (Social psychology) ,SOCIOLOGY ,POLITICAL attitudes - Abstract
This essay responds to article 'How Has Bourdieu Been Good to Think With? The Case of the United States,' which appears in this issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The emergence of sociology from political economy in the United States: 1890 to 1940.
- Author
-
YOUNG, CRISTOBAL
- Subjects
SOCIAL scientists ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,HISTORY of sociology ,SOCIOLOGY ,SCHOLARLY method ,SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIETIES ,TWENTIETH century ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
Professional sociology in the U.S. began as a field area within economics, but gradually emerged as a separate discipline. Using new data on joint meetings and the separation of departments, I track interdisciplinary relations through three phases: sponsorship (1890–1905), collaboration (1905–1940), and disengagement (post-1940). In the early years, sociology was mostly a branch of economics departments. With the formation of the American Sociological Society, relations with economics began to be more characterized by professionally autonomous collaboration. The 1920s saw a large wave of sociology departments separating from economics. Still, joint annual meetings (including joint presidential addresses) remained the norm until 1940. Paradigmatic conflict between institutional and neoclassical economists was the major force that sustained the economics–sociology collaboration. As institutionalism faded from the scene in the late 1930s, so went interdisciplinary contact. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Robin Williams and the Long Twentieth Century of American Sociology ... or Back to the Future.
- Author
-
Bearman, Peter
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIAL science research ,HISTORY of sociology ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL interaction ,EXPECTATION (Philosophy) ,SOCIAL influence ,SIGNIFICATION (Logic) - Abstract
In this essay, I reflect on the ways elements of Robin M. Williams Jr.’s research agenda might be carried forth in a meaningful way to sociological studies of twenty-first-century phenomena—in particular identifying the ways in which the facts of human interaction, of human expectation, and of human influence shapes outcomes of significance for our present, our future, and, therefore, our past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Physician dominance in the 21st century: Examining the rise of non‐physician autonomy through prevailing theoretical lenses.
- Author
-
Feyereisen, Scott, McConnell, William, Thomas, Clayton, and Puro, Neeraj
- Subjects
MIDWIVES ,PROFESSIONS ,SOCIOLOGY ,NURSING laws ,MATHEMATICAL models ,NURSING specialties ,MEDICAL care ,QUANTITATIVE research ,REGRESSION analysis ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,THEORY ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,PHYSICIANS ,NURSE practitioners ,MEDICAL coding ,NURSE prescribing - Abstract
Theories of physician dominance are a foundational contribution of medical sociology to the study of health care, but must be revisited in the light of ongoing changes in medicine. As non‐physician specialists like nurse practitioners grow in number and acquire more autonomy, increasing medical profession differentiation presents a challenge for traditional physician dominance theories. After evaluating potential theoretical explanations for subordinate occupations' autonomy gains, we conduct a state‐level quantitative analysis of variation in nursing policies across U.S. states. We construct our dependent variable, nursing autonomy, using seven state‐level advanced practice nursing policies adopted from 2001–2017. Using an ordered scale, we code nurse practitioner, nurse anaesthetist, nurse midwife and clinical‐nurse‐specialist practice and prescription polices according to each policy's autonomy level. We then use time‐series regression to examine theory‐driven propositions regarding nursing autonomy change. Nursing autonomy has increased over time, signalling a general erosion of physician dominance. However, we find differential patterns of policy adoption, indicating that erosion is not uniform. Physicians have maintained dominance in relatively prestigious specialties (e.g. anaesthesiology) while dominance declined in others (e.g. obstetrician). Factors external to the profession, such as consumer power, continue to influence within‐profession dynamics. Examining ongoing professional differentiation in medicine illustrates how physician dominance depends on shifting social and professional contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Saving Academic Sociology.
- Author
-
Rossi, Peter H.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,APPLIED sociology ,SCHOLASTICISM (Theology) ,MINORITIES - Abstract
In this article the author argues that United States academic sociology threatens to slip into the limited relevance of scholasticism. Applied sociology and academic sociology are both quite heterogeneous sets of activities. The core of academic sociology consists of teaching, scholarship, and research. There are many different ways to fulfill each function, however: some teach primarily lower-division courses whereas others spend most of their teaching time with graduate students. Indeed, a case can be made that one specialty within sociology is what might be called "LD sociology," i.e., lower-division sociology. Similarly, scholarship and research are also quite heterogeneous. On average, if one counts all sorts of publications, faculty members publish one item every other year, but the median is close to zero, indicating that the average is strongly influenced by a minority who publish very heavily. Cutting across academic activities are the various intellectual styles within so ciology and subject matter specialization.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Note from the New Editor.
- Author
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Hall, Richard H.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,FORUMS ,MANUSCRIPTS ,JOURNALISM - Abstract
This article is a note from the new editor of the journal "Sociological Forum," for the first issue processed in the Albany office in New York. The issue is similar to the issues from offices in Ithaca and Stony Brook. Two reasons for this continuity are that the papers in editorial process at Stony Brook were sent to Albany in the editorial office transition and that editors are at the mercy of the authors who submit manuscripts. The plea made to authors by editor Stephen Cole was that if one had a manuscript ready for submission, one should first think of the "Sociological Forum."
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Anthropology of Learning: A Continuing Story.
- Author
-
Erickson, Frederick and Espinoza, Manuel Luis
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,ANTHROPOLOGICAL education ,UNITED States education system ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL criticism - Abstract
The article offers information about the anthropology and education. It mentions the importance of focusing on learners as active agents who differ in their selective and partial cultural learning, a corrective to the tendency in studies of "cultural transmission" to overlook variety and change in cultural communities. It discusses the narratives of social criticism had developed in the "new sociology of education" in Great Britain and in revisionist history of education in the U.S.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rethinking the Family.
- Author
-
Kymlicka, Will
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,WOMEN'S rights ,SOCIAL attitudes ,SOCIOLOGY ,HUMAN rights ,SOCIAL sciences ,WOMEN'S employment - Abstract
The article discusses the sexual equality in the U.S. It is stated that liberal theorists generally accepted that women should be viewed as free and equal beings who is capable of self-determination and a sense of justice and free to enter the public domain of economy and government. Moreover, liberal democracies have increasingly adopted antidiscrimination statutes destined to ensure that women have equal access to education, employment and political office. However, sex equality has been ineffective in the U.S. in which full-working women earn only 71 percent of what working men earn. Furthermore, the paper also discusses Susan Moller's argument of dominant conception of sexual equality on her excellent book "Justice, Gender and the Family."
- Published
- 1991
45. The Prominence of Formal Theory in Sociology.
- Author
-
Willer, David
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIOLOGY ,ARCHITECTURE ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
In sociology, work in formal theory is more extensive and intensive today than at any time in the past, but remains invisible to some, including S. Zhao [(1996) "The Beginning of the End or the End of the Beginning: The Theory Construction Movement Revisited," Sociological Forum, Vol 11, No. 2, pp. 305-318]. I trace the growth of formal theory in sociology focusing on theoretical research programs and show that, whereas formal theory came after the books on theory construction, it was not based on them. Elementary Theory's research program provides an example of that discontinuity. Some misunderstandings concerning formal theory can be traced to the Maryland Theory Conference of 1990 and a critique of selected ideas of that Conference is offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Social Inequality and Art Institutions.
- Author
-
Blau, Peter M., Blau, Judith R., Quets, Gail A., and Lath, Tetsuya
- Subjects
SOCIAL classes ,EQUALITY ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL institutions ,SOCIAL systems - Abstract
Our objective is to examine how several aspects of the class structure influence the prevalence of artistic institutions. The analysis is based on quantitative comparisons of the 125 largest metropolitan areas in the United States. Most of the literature on the history of art concludes that artistic developments depend on the patronage of an elite-as noble patrons, as rich donors, or even as affluent bourgeois donors and audiences. Whereas these conclusions imply that class inequalities further the growth of the arts, our empirical findings indicate the opposite. Both lesser inequality and reductions of inequality in a metropolis increase a variety of artistic institutions, and these influences persist when other influences on these institutions are controlled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Emergence of Environmental Sociology: Contributions of Riley E. Dunlap and William R. Catton, Jr.
- Author
-
Freudenburg, William R. and Gramling, Robert
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,ENVIRONMENTAL sociology ,COMMUNICATION & culture ,ECOLOGY ,DUALISM - Abstract
Human beings have a dualistic relationship with the environment, being subject to physical and biological limits and yet being unique in the capacity for culture and symbolic communication. Sociology reflects this context and adds another dualism, drawing heavily from the concepts and perspectives of biological ecology, but reacting almost violently against ‘reductionism’ of any sort, specifically including social Darwinism and environmental determinism. During much of the twentieth century, the predominant trend within sociology was for scholars to downplay or even ignore the importance of the environment, particularly in the United States. This trend was ultimately counterbalanced by sociological responses to the environmental movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s and by the efforts of selected sociologists—particularly Riley Dunlap and William Cation—who helped bring together the field of ‘environmental sociology’ Given the finite nature of many natural resources and the ways in which human activities depend upon and affect the environment, the field of environmental sociology is likely to be an increasingly important one in the years to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. CHANGING VIEWS OF COMMUNITY STUDIES: MIDDLETOWN AS A CASE STUDY.
- Author
-
Hoover, Dwight W.
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,RELIGIOUS life ,COMMUNITIES ,SOCIOLOGY ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The background and history of the three major studies that have been made of Middletown (Muncie, Indiana) are traced. The findings of these studies are summarized, their contributions evaluated, and their receptions described. The problems inherent in trying to replicate results over a lengthy span of years in community research are analyzed, concluding with some thoughts on the future of community studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Encouraging aForumfor Sociological Ideas.
- Author
-
Jackson, Robert
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,SOCIOLOGY ,MASS media ,SERIAL publications ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The article comments on the twentieth year of the "Sociological Forum" periodical in the U.S. in 2005. Since the first issues under its founding editor Robin M. Williams Jr. in 1986, the periodical has tried to encourage critical analytical exchanges among sociologists. In its pages, implicit and explicit 'conversations' between scholars debate the ideas that rule our intellectual lives. Contested facts, alternative methodologies, opposing theories, competing perspectives and distinctive world views punctuate those conversations. The March 2005 issue of the "Sociological Forum" offers a group of articles that effectively represent a range of these conversations, each in its own way issuing a challenge to other scholars.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Trends in the Relative Influence of Education and Income on Highbrow Taste, 1982–2012.
- Author
-
Yuksek, Durmus A., Dumais, Susan A., and Kamo, Yoshinori
- Subjects
ARTS ,CULTURAL capital ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL classes ,ART museums - Abstract
Although numerous studies have confirmed the separate effects of economic and cultural capital on arts participation, research focusing on the cumulative and interactive effects of economic and cultural capital through the creation of taste publics is limited. Using data from the United States (Survey of Public Participation in the Arts [1982–2012]), this research integrates economic and cultural capital—measured as income and education—into the analysis of taste, creates taste publics, and examines their association with highbrow arts participation over time. We find that the effects of economic and cultural capital on highbrow arts participation decreased between 1982 and 2012, and American publics seem to have converged across both types of capital. Implications of the findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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