594 results
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2. What sociologists learn from music: identity, music-making, and the sociological imagination.
- Author
-
Back, Les
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGICAL imagination ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,DEVIANT behavior ,ROCK groups ,IMAGINATION ,BASS guitarists ,FIELD research - Abstract
Sociologists very often have extra-curricular lives as musicians. This article explores the relationship between musical life and sociological identities. Through a range of examples from Howard Becker's grounding in field research as a pianist in the Chicago jazz clubs and his theories of deviance, to the connection between Emma Jackson's life as a bass player in Brit pop band Kenickie and her feminist punk sociology, an argument is developed about the things sociologists learn from music. Based on 28 life history interviews with contemporary sociologists this paper shows how sociologists learn – both directly and tacitly – to understand society through their engagement with music. Music offers them an interpretive device to read cultural history, a training in the unspoken and yet structured aspects of culture, and an attentiveness to improvised and interactive aspects of social interaction. For sociologists, involvement in music making is also an incitement to get off campus and encounter an alternative world of value and values. Music enables sociologists to sustain their research imaginations and inspires them to make sociology differently. However, the article concludes that in the contemporary neoliberal university it is harder for sociologists to sustain a creative hinterland in music. The tacit knowledges that often nourish sociological identities may run the risk of being depleted as a result. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 'Full speed ahead Barcelona': the social construction of Roy Keane's 1999 semi-final performance versus Juventus.
- Author
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Doehler, Steph
- Subjects
SOCCER teams ,ACADEMIC debating ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
For over 30 years, the men's UEFA Champions League (UCL) has showcased Europe's most elite and wealthiest football clubs. Debates surrounding the competition's best individual performance rarely reach a consensus. However, one common response points towards Manchester United's Roy Keane versus Juventus in the 1999 semi-final second leg. After falling 2-0 behind within 11 minutes, Keane almost single-handedly swung the game in United's favour as the final in Barcelona loomed. This article examines Keane's performance through the lens of a sociological case-study, drawing on the circumstances of his career and the match itself. Critical attention is given to sociologist Everett Hughes' conceptual belief of turning points, which has been innovatively applied to a single event in this paper. The author argues that, while statistics have typically driven performance analysis, only a sociological interpretation of Keane's performance provides an accurately sophisticated comprehension of, arguably, one of the UCL's greatest individual performances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Re-situating Weber-reception in the circulation of knowledge: analyzing the intermediation of Chinese sociologists with overseas trajectory.
- Author
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Tsai, Po-Fang
- Subjects
OVERSEAS Chinese ,DISCIPLINE of children ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,GAZE - Abstract
Copyright of Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology & Society is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd 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
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. Employment and education of Sociologists. Opportunities and critical factors of a multifaceted profession.
- Author
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Facchini, Carla
- Subjects
LABOR market ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,PROFESSIONS ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIOLOGY of work - Abstract
The aim of these issue of 'International Review of Sociology' is to present some reflections, which, starting from the analysis of several mediterranean countries, highlight the overall employment context of graduates in Sociology, characterised by widespread underemployment (or over-education) and difficulties in accessing the labour market. In particular, the papers highlight the need for a greater connection between academic sociology and professionals and the university's responsibility to establish adequate training paths and provide both specific and transversal skills, which are fundamental in the work of the sociology professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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6. Prefigurative politics and social change: a typology drawing on transition studies.
- Author
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Törnberg, Anton
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,REVOLUTIONARIES ,SOCIAL innovation ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
Recent years have seen a surge of interest in prefigurative politics, which refers to the political strategies that model a future society on a micro level and aim to instantiate radical social change in and through practice. While most previous studies have focused on defining the concept and categorizing various types of prefiguration, this paper contributes by investigating under what circumstances prefiguration leads to revolutionary social change. The paper takes an original approach to these issues by turning to transition studies and the socio-technical change literature. This field focuses on the technical equivalence of prefiguration: namely, the relationship between small-scale niche innovations and large-scale technological transitions. Through theoretical discussions and empirical illustrations, this paper presents a typology of five transition pathways through which prefigurative strategies may result in a range of social change outcomes from reformative to revolutionary transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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7. The Pricking of a Sacred Cow: A Suggestion for Reform of the Manuscript Review Process and the Gatekeepers' Response.
- Author
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Willis, Cecil L., Richad . Wells, and Picou, J. Steven
- Subjects
LITERATURE ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences ,HUMANITIES ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,MANUSCRIPTS - Abstract
The paper examines the review process currently in vogue in process currently in vogue in the social sciences and contends that the process is in need of reform. The authors propose multiple submissions of extended abstracts as a possibility. The paper tests this alternative and presents an analysis of the results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
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8. Economics in sociology? Original economic theories, concepts and approaches in classical sociologists.
- Author
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Zafirovski, Milan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC sociology ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,BEHAVIORAL assessment ,ECONOMIC activity ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
This paper explores the presence and consideration of economics in sociology, specifically its classical version. It identifies certain original and independent economic theories, concepts and approaches in classical sociological theory as central and its derivations, implications and extensions of economics as peripheral. The paper argues and demonstrates that classical sociology is far from being the science of noneconomic or irrational phenomena, as often sociologists conceive it and economists perceive it in counter-distinction from economics defined as the science of rational behavior, and indeed encompasses virtually all economic activities and processes, and thus prefigures New Economic Sociology adopting the same approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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9. The Oxford Ethnography Conference: a place in history?
- Author
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Walford, Geoffrey
- Subjects
ETHNOLOGY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,ACADEMIC discourse ,SEMINARS ,HISTORY of societies ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
This paper gives a history of the Oxford Ethnography Conference. Over more than three decades, a regular conference of sociologists of education and ethnographers has met and produced a series of academic writings. The paper describes some of the interrelationships between developments that occurred within the conference and external changes to the academic environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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10. Universalism vs. particularism: a round trip from sociology to economics.
- Author
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de Blasio, Guido, Scalise, Diego, and Sestito, Paolo
- Subjects
ECONOMIC sociology ,SOCIAL scientists ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
Social scientists, in particular sociologists, claim that the distinction between universalistic and particularistic values is relevant to explaining the social behaviour of individuals (and societies). This paper provides preliminary empirical evidence that supports the claim. It first defines a number of proxies for the degree of particularism embedded into long-celebrated dimensions of social behaviour (trust, political awareness, and associational activities). Then, it shows that the particularistic measures are positively correlated to each other and negatively correlated to some established generalist measures for all dimensions of social behaviour considered, both across and within countries and regions. Moreover, the paper relates that the various proxies for particularism share the same set of covariates (such as low education and income), which are neatly distinguishable from the determinants of the generalist measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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11. Lazarsfeld's wives, or: what happened to women sociologists in the twentieth century.
- Author
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Fleck, Christian
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,SOCIAL scientists ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,TWENTY-first century ,STUDENT records ,ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
The paper compares the lives of three female social scientists born in the first two decades of the twentieth century and belonging to the first generations that had the opportunity not only to study at universities, but also to realistically consider a professional career in academia. Marie Jahoda, Herta Herzog and Patricia L. Kendall made their ways separately and interacted only rarely with each other, but shared at least one characteristic which influenced their careers: they were married to Paul F. Lazarsfeld, one of the eminent sociologists of the twentieth century, prominent as someone who encouraged and supported many of his collaborators and students. The comparison of these three women shows that they were professionally successful but did not completely prioritize academic work before other interests, ambitions, and obligations. These priorities found a correspondence in their underperformance in academia with regard to the particular preconditions to enter the pantheon of an academic discipline. Both their oeuvres and their academic records suggest that they were not actively striving to become academic 'immortals.' Here it is shown that women, even if they are to be located below the 'ultra elite,' produced remarkable and memorable intellectual achievements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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12. The Inevitability and Promise of Historical Sociology.
- Author
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Donovan, Brian
- Subjects
HISTORICAL sociology ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
As sociologists, we engage in history whether or not we see ourselves, professionally, as historical sociologists. These remarks discuss the varieties of ways sociologists use and approach historical scholarship, including history-as-context, analytic comparative/historical sociology, and interpretive approaches. I also reflect on the first fifty years of Midwest Sociological Society to show that, at different moments, the MSS mirrored, propelled, or lagged behind societal change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Debating sociology and climate change.
- Author
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Bhatasara, Sandra
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY education ,CLIMATE change ,SOCIAL problems ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,PHYSICAL sciences - Abstract
This paper deals with the role of sociology in climate change research and policies. Climate change can be regarded as one of the greatest challenges facing the world today. It has attracted attention from several disciplines, with the physical sciences regarded as dominating climate change research. Apparently, despite that climate change is inherently a social problem, sociologists have been slow in tackling it, at both theoretical and policy levels. Even so, available literature contains assorted and interesting sociological contributions and insights. As such, this paper posits that sociologists are interested in climate change issues, have a lot to offer and they can draw from a number of sub-fields. For instance, using sociology of sustainable consumption sociologists can tackle how societies can re-organise consumption patterns and habits, sociology of education provokes more intriguing research into the construction of climate change science, knowledge and solutions and feminist sociology can extend robust research into how the material and discursive dimensions of climate change are profoundly gendered. Importantly, critical sociology provides a repertoire of concepts and novel methods that can be deployed in climate change research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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14. Financial Market Capitalism and Labour in Germany. Merits and Limits of a Sociological Concept.
- Author
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Haipeter, Thomas
- Subjects
FINANCIAL markets ,MARKET capitalization ,FINANCIAL crises ,LABOR market ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,COLLECTIVE bargaining ,WORKS councils - Abstract
Since the financial crisis at the end of the last decade, Germany is regarded again as a successful coordinated market economy. However, a closer look at labour and working conditions reveals disturbing phenomena like an increase of psychical stress, growing shares of low wage employment or the erosion of collective bargaining or works councils' coverage. Finance capitalism has become the most popular concept among German sociologists to explain why and how industrial relations and working conditions have been put under pressure in the last one or two decades. But how coherent is the finance capitalism story? This question is tackled in the paper, based on literature review and empirical findings. The paper argues that the concept is overexpanded and that, first, financial market capitalism is refractured by agency and actors on different instituitonal levels and that, second, there are other and independent developments influencing industrial relations like globalisation or the deregulation of labour markets that have to be taken into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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15. Techno-environmental risks and ecological modernisation in “double-risk” societies: reconceptualising Ulrich Beck’s risk society thesis.
- Author
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Hasan, Md Nazmul
- Subjects
MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
By utilising a relatively underused framework developed by Maurie J. Cohen (1997. Risk society and ecological modernisation alternative visions for post-industrial nations.Futures, 29 (2), 105–119), this theoretical paper joins two of the most debated theories of environmental politics – ecological modernisation (EM) and Ulrich Beck’s risk society thesis – into a unified framework and problematises some of their implicit assumptions to theoretically introduce the notion of a “double-risk” society. In addition, it explains the differences between the traditional “Risk Society” theorised by the German sociologist Ulrich Beck and the newly introduced concept of a “double-risk” society. The arguments put forward in this paper provide some fresh perspectives facilitating the study of the techno-environmental risks and other ecological problems faced by “double-risk” societies. Theoretically, this paper adds to both EM theory and the risk society thesis as the generalisability of their existing versions is limited precisely because they fail to address some important social changes at the global structural level. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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16. A Conversation between Nancy Chodorow and Ilene Philipson.
- Author
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Chodorow, Nancy J. and Philipson, Ilene
- Subjects
FAMILIES ,CLINICAL psychology ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,GRADUATE education ,SOCIOLOGY ,PSYCHOANALYSTS - Abstract
It is an immense pleasure to be here today with my mentor, Nancy Chodorow. In 1976 I entered graduate school in sociology specifically to study with Nancy. As an undergraduate I had read two brilliant articles that Nancy published as a graduate student prior to The Reproduction of Mothering, in which she used psychoanalysis "to account for the reproduction within each generation of certain general and nearly universal differences that characterize masculine and feminine personality and roles" ("Family Structure and Feminine Personality" in Rosaldo and Lamphere Women, Culture and Personality). I was dazzled. Nancy not only went on to chair my dissertation in sociology, but nine years later sat on my committee for my dissertation in clinical psychology that became On the Shoulders of Women: The Feminization of Psychotherapy. We both now are psychoanalysts, sociologists and feminists. While we each have traveled down our own paths, I always have wondered how Nancy, as a graduate student at Brandeis, could write with such courage, conviction and, well, chutzpah, to take on the project of not only understanding why women mother, but how gender is socially reproduced across generations and cultures. I also took this as an opportunity to discuss how her thinking and interests have changed over time since the publication of her groundbreaking Reproduction of Mothering, a book that heralded a new era in our understanding of gender and psychoanalysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. On the Shoulders of Citers: Notes on the Social Organization of Intellectual Deference.
- Author
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Brossard, Baptiste and Ruiz-Junco, Natalia
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,INTELLECTUALS ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,RESPECT ,ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (Law) - Abstract
The sociological study of intellectual recognition has tended to focus on highly cited and highly acclaimed authors and perspectives, while reserving some interest for those who are "forgotten." We know much less about the liminal cases: authors who are in-between fame and oblivion. This paper proposes a way to study intellectual recognition, by examining the liminal case of sociologist Charles H. Cooley. Based on a multilayered (quantitative and qualitative) citation analysis of Cooley's classic work, Human Nature and the Social Order (HNSO), we study the role of intellectual deference in accounting for this liminality. Specifically, we identify two distinct deference processes: acknowledgment and involvement. We argue that Cooley has survived intellectual oblivion by standing on the shoulders of citers, as he has received substantial acknowledgment but decreasing involvement. In the conclusion, we discuss the implications of our paper for the understanding of the making of sociological theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. The sociologist: a profession without a community.
- Author
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Siza, Remo
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,OCCUPATIONAL sociology ,LABOR market ,SUPPLY & demand ,PROFESSIONS ,OCCUPATIONAL science - Abstract
The main focus of the Italian literature on the profession of the sociologist is the transmission of sociological knowledge and the occupational outcomes of sociology graduates. In my paper, I try to examine additional aspects in depth that I believe to be crucial for the development of the profession: the absence of a sociological community of interests, the weak forms of association not supporting sociologists working in non-academic settings with regards to interprofessional conflicts and a public presence that conveys and transmits the usefulness of the profession and the discipline. Sociologists rarely use the skills acquired through formal education to strengthen their position in the labour market through collective actions. Their effort to control the market of particular services is too weak. In the paper, I argue for the need to construct a community of interest that intends to include practitioners and academic sociologists in their entirety, independently from institutional membership and to promote sufficient control on the dynamics of supply and demand of professional services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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19. A Global Scientific Community? Universalism Versus National Parochialism in Patterns of International Communication in Sociology*.
- Author
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Haller, Max
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL communication ,COMMUNICATION patterns ,WESTERN countries ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,LINGUISTIC rights ,SCIENTIFIC community - Abstract
The paper starts from the thesis that unhindered international communication is a central characteristic of modern science. Second, the paper argues that scientific progress cannot be defined unequivocally in the social sciences. Four structures inhibit free international communication (linguistic barriers, the size of a national sociological community, the quality of scientific research, and the influence of specific sociologists and their schools). Third, three kinds of data are used to investigate the relevance of these factors: The participation in international congresses, the quotation patterns in major sociological journals and the reasons for the exceptional success of three sociologists, from the USA, France and Germany, respectively. Finally, a short hint toward the development of sociology outside the Western world is given. The paper concludes with some reflections on strategies to change the one-sided, asymmetrical communication in sociology toward a more balanced pattern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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20. Searching for pearls: 'Doing' biographical research on Pearl Jephcott.
- Author
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Goodwin, John
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
In this paper, I outline my ongoing research into the life and work of the forgotten sociologist Pearl Jephcott (1900–1980) with three objectives in mind. First, I consider the practice 'doing' of biographical research into Pearl's life and work as well as briefly discuss how researching 'sociological biographies' intersects with 'genealogical' research. I do this to give a clear overview of the biographical research process and offer some insights into the realities/practicalities of the 'doing' of biographical research. This is important to 'throw light on our practices' (p. 167) as mentioned by Moore, Salter, Stanley, and Tamboukou [2016, The archive project archival research in the social sciences. London: Routledge] so that those who want to engage in this approach can learn directly from those who do biographical research. Second, using her notebooks, I briefly outline Jephcott's sociological/biographical research practice. Pearl was a biographical research practitioner well before this approach became 'fashionable' and ahead of the 'biographical turn'. Finally, the paper concludes with the sharing the lessons that I, and others, have and can learn from Pearl's work, and I reflect a little on how researching Pearl's biography has changed my sociological practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The politics of disagreement in critical education policy studies: a response to Morsy, Gulson and Clarke.
- Author
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Sellar, Sam, Savage, Glenn C., and Gorur, Radhika
- Subjects
EDUCATION & politics ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper engages with Morsy, Gulson and Clarke's response to the recent special issue ofDiscourse(Vol. 34, No. 2) that examined evolutions of markets and equity in education. We welcome Morsy, Gulson and Clarke's supplementation of the special issue with the genealogical analysis they provide of private school funding in Australia and the attention they draw to elisions of race, ethnicity, Indigeneity and whiteness in contemporary framings of equity in policy and research. We also clarify and expand on some of the aims and arguments that framed the special issue. However, we feel that any response adequate to the ‘event’ that Morsy, Gulson and Clarke hope to stage – that is, a ‘debate redux’ and politics of dissensus in education as an antidote to depoliticisation – must extend beyond the rehearsal of pre-existing positions; it cannot stop at endorsing or critiquing the points raised in their paper, or reiterating the rationales and arguments of the special issue. We therefore respond by gesturing towards possibilities for ‘disagreement’, in the sense that Jacques Ranciere gives this term, about the political vocation of critical policy sociologists, and the modes of doing and being that can be seen as ‘critical’ and ‘political’ in academic education research. We do not disagree with Morsy, Gulson and Clarke in the usual sense; for that reason, we engage seriously with their call for a politics of dissensus in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The quest for cognitive justice: towards a pluriversal human rights education.
- Author
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Zembylas, Michalinos
- Subjects
HUMAN rights ,EDUCATION ,DECOLONIZATION ,SOCIAL justice ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper turns to the work of the Portuguese sociologist Boaventura de Sousa Santos and explores how a set of concepts he developed over the years may constitute valuable tools in the task of decolonising and pluriversalising Human Rights Education (HRE). Informed by decolonial theory, Santos highlights that the struggle for global social justice is inseparable from the struggle for cognitive justice, namely, the recognition of epistemic diversity. This paper makes a contribution to the efforts that view the pluriversalisation of HRE as inextricable parts of the wider task of decolonising knowledge and education and struggling for social justice. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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23. 'A Time of War': contextual and organisational dimensions in the construction of combat motivation in the IDF.
- Author
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Ben-Shalom, Uzi and Benbenisty, Yizhaq
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,LABOR supply ,IDEOLOGY ,MILITARY doctrine - Abstract
This paper explores the construction of combat motivation in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), arguing that although Israeli society at large is in a 'Post Heroic' era, the 'Heroic Spirit' is revealed during emergencies. A total of 1535 questionnaires were administered among combat soldiers during large-scale operations fought during national emergency and during small-scale routine operations. The results reveal differences in the construction of combat motivation typical for emergency vs. routine, as well as for reserves vs. regular units. These results indicate that the Post Heroic era is a condition that could be shifted according to cultural, organisational and individual determinants. This paper discusses the roots of these constructions and their implications on the theory of combat motivation and combat experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Beyond the Narratives of Decolonization: Re-situating Sociological Knowledge within the Context of Development in South Africa.
- Author
-
Anugwom, Edlyne E.
- Subjects
DECOLONIZATION ,NARRATIVES ,THEORY of knowledge ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper engages with the recent discourse on decolonization of knowledge in South Africa from a sociological perspective. It interrogates the position and relevance of both sociology and sociologists to the development aspirations of South Africa. Its basic assumption is that sociology as a discipline is invaluable to the current needs for social reformation and reconstruction in South Africa. While the relevance of sociology as a discipline consistent with unravelling the complex and complicated dynamics of social formations remains unquestioned, its value as the embodiment of social aspirations and development has been undermined by the unquestioning assumption of the superiority of knowledge systems from outside and the glaring failure to promote sociology that is both contextualized and responsive. There is no arguing the prominent role of sociology in the liberation struggles and initial encounter with imperialism; there is also no doubt that sociologists nowadays have found comfort in an uninvolving study of society and the generation of knowledge that hardly functions as an adequate anchor for the existential needs of society. This paper therefore argues for the emergence of "frontier" sociologists and sociology of relevance which interrogates knowledge from outside and critically builds conviviality between outsider and African ontologies and epistemologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Sociology, risk and the environment: a material-semiotic approach.
- Author
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Wong, Catherine Mei Ling and Lockie, Stewart
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY of risk ,RISK assessment ,SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL action - Abstract
Sociology has made significant contributions to the conceptualisation of risk and critique of technical risk analysis. It has, however, unintentionally reinforced the division of labour between the natural/technical and social sciences in risk analysis. This paper argues that the problem with conceptualisations of risk is not a misplaced emphasis on calculation. Rather, it is that we have not adequately dealt with ontological distinctions implicit in both sociological and technical work on risk between material or objective risks and our socially mediated understandings and interpretations of those risks. While acknowledging that risks are simultaneously social and technical, sociologists have not, in practice, provided the conceptual and methodological tools to apprehend risk in a less dualistic manner. This limits our ability both to analyse actors and processes outside the social domain and to explore the recursive relationships between risk calculus, social action and the material outcomes of risk. In response, this paper develops a material-semiotic conceptualisation of risk and provides an assessment of its relevance to more sociologically informed risk governance. It introduces the ideas of co-constitution, emergent entities and enactment as instruments for reconciling the material and social worlds in a sociological study of risk. It further illustrates the application of a material-semiotic approach using these concepts in the nuclear industry. In deconstructing social-material dualisms in the sociology of risk, this paper argues that a material-semiotic conceptualisation of risk enables both technical and social perspectives on risk not only to coexist but to collaborate, widening the scope for interdisciplinary research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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26. SOME MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT SCIENTIFIC SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY.
- Author
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Tindall, D. B.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences ,BEHAVIORAL scientists ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL scientists ,THEORY - Abstract
I review and discuss the articles in this issue by Walker, by Wanner, and by Heidtman et al. There are three main themes that appear in all three papers: these flow from the shared commitment among these authors to understanding and promoting "scientific theory construction" within sociology, and to dispelling some common misconceptions about scientific sociological theory. The common themes that run through the three papers can be put in the form of questions: 1) What is a theory? 2) How should we evaluate theory? 3) How does theory grow? In addition to discussing these three main themes. I discuss four sub-themes that emerged: 1) Sociology as a Scientific Endeavor; 2) Critiques of General Theory as Being Positivistic; 3) Unitary versus Multiple Forms of Theory Building; 4) Professional/Disciplinary Barriers to Theory Construction and Theory Building in Sociology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The temporal dimension of reflexivity: linking reflexive orientations to the stock of knowledge.
- Author
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Elster, Julius
- Subjects
REFLEXIVITY ,PERSONALITY & culture ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIALIZATION ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
Although attempts to complement the concept of reflexivity with social embeddedness have been made by many sociologists, theoretical tools for coming to grips with ‘temporally embedded’ aspects of reflexive activity have yet to make an entrance in the sociological arena. This paper intends to rectify this deficiency by spelling out how laypeople’s reflexive orientations draw onpastlived experiences in the social world. Margaret Archer’s celebrated approach to reflexivity struggles to accommodate this dimension of reflexive agents since its clear ‘subjective–objective distinction’ is hostile to any talk of reflexivity as beinghistorically constituted. A complementary account that allows us to map out and systematize temporal processes concerning reflexivity is, therefore, apt, an account that must address the fact that: reflexive activity does not start from scratch, in a vacuum, each time it operates; and, effects of previous lived experiences are at the heart of the mediatory process of reflexivity. By drawing on phenomenologically inspired sociology, and borrowing Schütz’s notion of ‘stock of knowledge’, I intend to flesh out how my account of reflexivity can be reconciled with the durable effects of sociotemporal embeddednesswithoutsacrificing the subjective and agentic qualities of reflexive activity. One immediate upshot of this ‘reconciliation’ is an empirical project that links a variety of reflexive orientations to multiple ‘time points’ (relevant lived experiences) and offers the prospect of penetrating deep intohowsocialization processes, identity formation and life trajectories actually transpire through temporality and reflexivity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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28. Is Research Possible? A rejoinder to Tooley's `On School Choice and Social Class'.
- Author
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Ball, Stephen J. and Gewirtz, Sharon
- Subjects
SCHOOL choice ,SOCIAL classes ,EDUCATION ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIAL science research - Abstract
This paper presents a response to some criticisms by James Tooley of our research on parental choice The paper argues that many of Tooley's criticism are based on systematic misinterpretations and misreadings of our work, ignorance of the procedures of qualitative research and the we of untenable speculations about sampling, data collection and the interpretation of data It is suggested that Tooley's criticisms are ideologically driven and that if taken senously would make qualitative social research impossible [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Comments on Willis, Wells and Picou.
- Author
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Corzine, Jay
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,LITERATURE ,HUMANITIES - Abstract
In this article, the reviewer shares the authors' sentiments that the manuscript review process in the social sciences including sociology, would benefit from substantial revision. They focus on one of the major problems, the often slow turn-around time from manuscript submission to editorial decision. The authors suggested revision of the submission and review process, soliciting an initial editorial decision as to the appropriateness of a paper for a journal on the basis of an extended abstract is a reasonable modification of the present system that offers the potential for improving its efficiency. Finally, the paper provides limited evidence that journal editors may not be such stalwart defenders of the status quo as many believe. Moreover, a strong majority of the editors did cooperate with the authors. This suggests that the current climate is at least somewhat receptive to this innovation and perhaps others as well.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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30. Specification of Boundaries of Constucted Types through Use of the Pattern Variable.
- Author
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Grimshaw, Allen D.
- Subjects
SOCIAL systems ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,AUTHORITY ,SOCIAL institutions ,SOCIAL status - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the applicability of Parsonian "pattern-variables" in defining a constructed type. Specification of boundaries or cutting-off points of role relationships in Weber's three types of authority systems, while an intriguing problem, is a project too great in scope for a short paper. Instead, for this preliminary attempt, a social system has been selected in which a few crucial role relationships define its character. It is also a system familiar to sociologists. The setting selected is the educational institution at the university level. The type to be defined, "the seat of learning," is perhaps the most "ideal" of ideal types. A number of other constructed type educational institutions might be isolated, e.g., "marriage markets," "sources of status," "diploma mills," or, perhaps, "campus playgrounds." Sets of role relationships could be specified to define any of these types. For purposes of illustration, however, the definition of one type will be sufficient. Four steps are involved in defining the constructed type: (1) selection of the crucial role pairs; (2) the definition of the chosen role relationships by use of the pattern-variables; (3) measurement of the pattern- variable choices; and (4) establishment of boundary points for the pattern-variables themselves. The fourth step will not be completed in this paper; it is felt that the necessary methodological apparatuses are already available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Questioning representations of athletes with elevated testosterone levels in elite women's sports: a critical policy analysis.
- Author
-
Brömdal, Annette, Olive, Rebecca, and Walker, Brooke
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,POLICY analysis ,TESTOSTERONE ,GENDER ,BIOETHICS - Abstract
Sport sociologists are often required to interpret, question and respond to the ways in which fairness and eligibility concerns in elite sports are represented in policy frameworks produced by sports governing bodies. Drawing on Carol Bacchi's critical policy analysis framework, 'what is the problem represented to be?', this paper explores the importance in developing a critical eye and reading about representations of women athletes with particular differences of sex development (DSD) with elevated testosterone levels and the idea of regulating their testosterone levels in the female classification. Through using the above critical policy analysis line of questioning, this analysis aims to consider what the problem of women athletes with relevant DSDs with elevated testosterone levels in female elite sports is represented to be; what the assumptions underlying these representations of the problem are; how these representations of the problem have come about; what is left unproblematic in this problem representation; what the lived effects produced by these representations of the problem are; and how these representations of the problem have been produced, disseminated, defended, questioned, disrupted and even could be replaced. The critical policy analysis argues that the continuing persistence of policies marking particular women with DSDs as a problem, is related in part to societal views defining particular bodies and athletic abilities in the female classification as either 'right' or 'wrong' and in need of fixing. In moving forward and redressing the problem, it requires the embodiment of biomedical ethics and human rights advocacy work by sports governing bodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The convergence of alternative food networks within “rural development” initiatives: the case of the New Rural Reconstruction Movement in China.
- Author
-
Si, Zhenzhong and Scott, Steffanie
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,RURAL development ,FOOD ,NEOLIBERALISM ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Rural sociologists and geographers have conceptualised different rural development trajectories including “the agri-industrial model”, “the post-productivist model” and “the rural development model”. Alternative food networks (AFNs) are increasingly recognised as a “forerunner” and a critical component of the emerging “rural development model” in the West. Meanwhile, Marsden and Franklin [2013. Replacing neoliberalism: theoretical implications of the rise of local food movements.Local Environment, 18 (5), 636–641] pointed out that there is a “local trap” in the current conceptualisation of AFNs that overemphasises their local embeddedness and heterogeneity. This “local trap” marginalises AFNs and, therefore, hinders their potential for transforming the industrialised conventional food system. The convergence and scaling-up of fragmented AFNs have been recognised as important ways to address this marginalisation issue and thus have attracted considerable attention. However, current studies of the convergence of AFNs focus mainly on the role of food-centred organisations without recognising the role of the emerging “rural development” initiatives in the convergence of AFNs. Based on in-depth interviews with key stakeholders and analysis of secondary data, this paper uses the New Rural Reconstruction Movement (NRRM), an emerging alternative rural development movement in China, as an example to illustrate how the NRRM opens up a novel space for the convergence of AFNs. We argue that the interrelationship between AFNs and rural development is indeed reciprocal. The NRRM, following the “rural development” trajectory, functions as a hub for the convergence and scaling-up of various alternative food initiatives. Strategies for achieving convergence include constructing a “common ground” for these initiatives, establishing national alliances and organisations, sharing knowledge and exchanging personnel among them. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Powerful knowledge, esoteric knowledge, curriculum knowledge.
- Author
-
Beck, John
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,ESOTERICISM ,SOCIAL realism ,EDUCATION research ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
This paper seeks to introduce a wider audience to a set of ideas developed by a group of sociologists of education who draw on Basil Bernstein’s late work on knowledge structures and whose epistemological stance is grounded in Social Realism. The paper’s main substantive focus is the concept of ‘powerful knowledge’ – recently popularised by Michael Young – and the implications of this notion for curriculum change. ‘Powerful knowledge’ connects with two other key ideas – ‘knowledge of the powerful’ and ‘esoteric knowledge’ – all of which have fed into recent debates about curriculum development and change. Various inter-connections between these ideas are examined. The paper concludes by identifying three chronic ‘tensions’ which impede efforts to extend powerful knowledge to socially and economically disadvantaged students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Should I pitch my tent in the middle ground? On 'middling tendency', Beck and inequality in youth sociology.
- Author
-
Threadgold, Steven
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,SOCIOLOGY ,REFLEXIVITY ,SOCIAL sciences ,BEHAVIORAL scientists ,YOUTH ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
In 2009 Woodman has recently challenged youth sociologists concerned with inequality to evolve from what he describes as a middling orthodoxy that misrepresents the work of Ulrich Beck in an effort to emphasise the continuing relevance of class. In 2010 Roberts forcefully responds to Woodman, arguing that Beck's own words and empirical evidence contradict his argument. Woodman responds to Roberts, reasserting his position and asks for the debate to move beyond mere 'quote wars'. This paper engages with this debate, taking Woodman's challenge seriously while maintaining that Beck's jettison of class is problematic, and that the concept of class itself is still vital. The paper concludes with suggestions as to what youth sociologists concerned with socio-economic inequality might want to focus upon in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. EDITORIAL.
- Author
-
Reay, Diane, Arnot, Madeleine, David, Miriam, Evans, John, and James, David
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL justice ,EQUALITY ,ETHNOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Editorial. French sociologist and internationally renowned public intellectual Pierre Bourdieu died in 2002. He developed a remarkable capacity for critical social analysis and epistemic reflexivity. He also organized a network of progressive social scientists into the group "Raisons d'agir" and launched a publishing house of the same name to bring sociological analyses of contemporary civic issues to a broader public. Bourdieu also succeeded in developing a highly individual brand of sociology. His scholarship was a synthesis of philosophy, social anthropology and sociology underpinned by a passionate commitment to social justice. An acute interest in social inequality and the ways in which it is masked and perpetuated became an enduring contribution preoccupation that influenced his writings.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Producing comics culture: a sociological approach to the study of comics.
- Author
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Brienza, Casey
- Subjects
MANGA (Art) ,ART & literature ,CULTURAL production ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,PUBLISHING ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,JAPAN-United States relations - Abstract
This paper introduces a sociological approach to the study of art and literature and demonstrates its value as a methodological intervention in the field of comics studies. Known as the 'production of culture' perspective, this approach argues that all artistic work - including comics - is the product of collective, often routinized, human activity. Therefore, it is not sufficient merely to study the text and/or the artist to whom the work is directly attributed. Rather, to fully understand any artistic work, one must also study the larger social and organizational context of its production and dissemination. In the first part of the paper, I will provide an overview of the production of culture approach, discussing some of its foundational theorists and their respective intellectual contributions. Sociologists covered will include Howard Becker, Pierre Bourdieu, and Richard A. Peterson. In the second part of the paper, I will present an example of how this approach may be applied in scholarly practice. Using the transnational comics publishing industry in Japan and the United States as a case study, I will show how the conditions and mode of production help to determine the particular sorts of texts that are actually created. Finally, I will conclude with a discussion of the limitations of the production of culture approach and possible directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. FORUM--Editor's Note.
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,PUBLISHING ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,HIGHER education ,MENTAL health - Abstract
The article presents information about the journal "Sociological Focus." For the last 32 years the official publication of the Ohio Valley Sociological Society has been the "Ohio Valley Sociologist," which primarily carried news and notes of interest to sociologists in the region. In the last few years the membership has become aware of a need for a modified format for the Sociologist. This has been manifest in the increasing publication of occasional papers including the presidential addresses and the winning papers from the student competition. In 1967 the society's members voted to expand the function of the sociologist so that greater space would be devoted to the publication of scholarly papers while maintaining the usual information service. In line with this new emphasis the title and the format of the journal have been changed. The papers in this issue deal with the sociology of academia and higher education. The winter issue will be a special issue on the sociology of mental health, the spring issue will deal with political sociology, and a future number will be devoted to papers on the sociology of religion.
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Commodification, water infrastructure, and methodologies for counting water losses in South Africa.
- Author
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Veriava, Ahmed
- Subjects
COMMODIFICATION ,BENCHMARKING (Management) ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL dynamics ,SOCIAL norms - Abstract
This article takes up the story of a numerical indicator of system water losses called Non-Revenue Water (NRW), which is becoming an important measure for benchmarking South African Water Service Authorities (WSAs). The aim of this paper is, in the first place, to document the adoption of NRW as a Performance Indicator (PI), showing how it reflects a shift in the domestic regulatory framework in South Africa and the assumed priorities of water managers in line with the dominant governmental rationality in the sector. However, in drawing this discussion towards the theme of commodification I also show that the NRW audit enables a new way of seeing and speaking about "public water," while the story of its uptake tells us a something about the development of contemporary governmental norms, and the forms of the resistance that shape it. On the one hand then, the article links the enthusiasm for NRW auditing in South Africa to a wider movement in the development and usage of audits and indicators as technologies of government at a distance. On the other hand, and stepping to a higher level of abstraction, I argue that the uptake of NRW must be read in relation to a contested set of processes marked by struggles over the commodification of water, and which sometimes turns up in the numbers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Differing to agree: a reply to Hammersley and Abraham.
- Author
-
Gewirtz, Sharon and Cribb, Alan
- Subjects
VALUES (Ethics) ,ETHICS ,REFLEXIVITY ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
In this paper Gewirtz and Cribb offer a response to Hammersley and Abraham's criticisms of their arguments about the place of values in social research published in this issue of BJSE. In doing so, they make clear that most of the positions that Hammersley and Abraham attribute to them are ones that they do not identify with and that, like Hammersley and Abraham, they would reject. In order to further clarify and specify their own position, Gewirtz and Cribb argue that: their advocacy of ethical reflexivity rests on the assumption that there are many incompatible sets of values in play within even a single vantage point; researchers should sometimes take an interest in knowledge use although they should not always be required to do so; and, whilst at the level of propositions it is always possible to abstract out and distinguish between factual claims and value claims, at the level of practice there can be significant resonances and linkages between the two, so it is important to be ethically reflexive about these entanglements. Finally, the authors agree that values should not be seen purely as a source of contamination but that attention to values can help to underpin 'objectivity'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Tradition, culture and identity in the reform of teachers' work in Scotland and England: some methodological considerations.
- Author
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Menter, Ian
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,IDENTITY (Philosophical concept) ,CONCEPTS ,SENSORY perception ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,CULTURE - Abstract
This paper seeks to explore how we may best understand the relationship between teacher identity and national culture. Using Raymond Williams' concept of 'structure of feeling' as a starting point, it is suggested that creative cultural forms of representation of teachers may complement social scientific studies to give a more complete and richer view of these matters. The paper focuses on England and Scotland, and has three substantive parts. First, consideration is given to the depictions of teachers in fictional literature from Scotland and England. Second, consideration is given to the range of methodologies that are deployed by sociologists in their consideration of teachers. Thirdly, the author draws on his own studies of teachers in both countries, to assess whether these throw any further light on questions of identity and culture. The concluding discussion argues that the complexities of the interplay between history, culture and identity are such that any single approach is unlikely to provide a broad understanding and therefore it is desirable to draw from different forms of enquiry in seeking to make sense of teacher identity in a national context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Altruism, sociology and the history of economic thought.
- Author
-
Steiner, Philippe
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,ALTRUISM ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper is organized in three stages. In the first part, I outline the evolution of the notion of altruism with its critical dimension of political economy by following the intellectual sequence from Auguste Comte to Pierre Bourdieu, through Emile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss. In the second, I consider the forms of transaction to which these sociologists report altruism and its derivatives. In the last section, I examine recent developments on altruism as a result of developments on performativity on the one hand and market design on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Unintended consequences of computer-mediated communications.
- Author
-
McAulay, Laurie
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies ,TELEMATICS ,EMAIL systems ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
This paper explores the unintended consequences of computer-mediated communications by adopting a typology suggested by the sociologist Robert Merton. The typology is used to present a thematic analysis drawn from the literature on computer-mediated communications and two new studies. The first study considered the impact of computer-mediated technology on communicative behaviour in general, and involved 22 managers working in locations in the UK and USA. The second study focused on electronic mail and drew upon the responses of 70 managers. The paper suggests that Merton's analysis of unintended consequences provides a framework which expands our ability to explain issues associated with the implementation of computer-mediated communications and discusses intervention and laissez-faire as two implicit responses evident in the recent literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Sociology research in contemporary South Africa.
- Author
-
Alexander, Peter, Basson, Lauren, and Makhura, Prudence
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,PERIODICALS ,SOCIAL sciences ,SOCIAL scientists - Abstract
Research, with a capital 'R', is a subject of considerable concern within South African ruling circles. There's not enough of it, and it's not the right kind, or so the argument runs. Recognising the importance of the material conditions of the researchers and the need for a bottom-up approach to developing research priorities, this paper focuses on the state of sociology research in South Africa today. It demonstrates that, over the past twelve years, a marked increase in the output of masters and doctoral graduates has been accompanied by a decline in the level of completed research by qualified sociologists. In terms of publications, there has been a significant increase in the proportion produced by women, but a negligible change in the number by black scholars. The paper rejects pessimistic assessments of the state of South African sociology. It concludes by arguing that the discipline should place itself at the centre of an integrated and engaged social science by drawing diverse strands together at a local level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Three Faces in Russian Sociology: Surviving Intellectually as Sociologists in a Totalitarian Society.
- Author
-
Himmelstrand, Ulf
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIOLOGICAL associations - Abstract
The author of the article shares his numerous encounters with sociologists. The World Congresses that are organized every forth year by the International Sociological Association (ISA) had never-before 1970-been situated within any of the countries of Eastern Europe which at that time were known as members of the Soviet Bloc. The first ISA World Congress to occur within the Soviet Bloc took place late in the summer of 1970 in Varna, Bulgaria. Sociologist Andrei Zdravomyslov was such an individual, a face emerging out of faceless anonymity. At one of the first plenary sessions in one of the large assembly halls at the World Congress in Varna he presented a paper comparing the conceptual frameworks of Marxian historical materialism and Western structural functionalism. In the debate after the presentation of papers, the author asked for the floor and tried to convey one of his darling ideas, namely that classical Marxism as well as Western structural functionalism lack a proper understanding of certain structural contradictions emerging in what he called "modes of information and cognition" in contemporary societies.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. What is an algorithm? Financial regulation in the era of high-frequency trading.
- Author
-
Coombs, Nathan
- Subjects
HIGH-frequency trading (Securities) ,MARKET manipulation ,STAKEHOLDERS ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,FLIGHT recorders - Abstract
In response to the flash crashes and market manipulations blamed on high-frequency trading (HFT), algorithms have been brought inside the regulatory perimeter. This paper focuses on the most ambitious regulation directed at the practice: the algorithm-tagging rule in the German High-Frequency Trading Act. Fifteen interviews with stakeholders in the Act’s implementation serve to reconstruct how regulators defined an algorithm and help pose the question of to what extent regulatory definitions and data need accurately to represent financial practices to be useful. Although tentative in its findings, the research suggests that the algorithm-tagging rule may be providing valuable signals in the noise to trade surveillance officers and having virtuous effects on the cultures of trading firms. The conclusion argues that sociologists of finance should adopt a more balanced approach when evaluating regulatory technologies and heed MacKenzie’s 2005 call to open up their black boxes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Curriculum Research and Curricular Politics.
- Author
-
Whitty, Geoff
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIOLOGY ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
This paper is intended to place the other papers in this issue of the journal in a broader theoretical and political context. It considers some of the ways in which sociologists of education have approached the analysis of the curriculum and discusses the extent to which their work can be seen as a contribution to political struggles in and around the curriculum. It pays particular attention to the ways in which recent American and Australian work in this field has developed and to some of the criticisms that have been made of the political orientation of such work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Socialisation into Teaching: the research which lost its way.
- Author
-
Atkinson, Paul and Delamont, Sara
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIALIZATION ,TEACHING ,TEACHERS ,PROFESSIONAL socialization ,OCCUPATIONS ,PROFESSIONS - Abstract
The paper argues that in recent years sociologists have neglected the processes of occupational socialisation of teaching, despite research interest in everyday life in other educational settings Shortcomings in the extant research on teacher socialisation and in the wider literature on professional socialisation are detailed to explain the lack of intellectual interest in teacher socialisation Finally, the paper offers some potential lines for the development of research on teacher socialisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Transition from School to Work and the Recession: evidence from the Scottish Leavers Surveys, 1977-1983.
- Author
-
Raffe, David
- Subjects
SCHOOLS ,WORK ,RECESSIONS ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,EMPLOYMENT ,EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
This paper uses data from the Scottish School Leavers Surveys to investigate trends in the transition from school at a time of deepening recession. The main change observed is the collapse of employment between 1979 and 1983. The paper also describes trends in the distribution of school-leaver employment, in its industrial and occupational composition, in patters of movement in the youth labour market and in the role of special programmes. Some of its general conclusions challenge ideas current among some British sociologists. First, youth unemployment (at least among recent school leavers) is no longer significantly connected with patterns of subemployment or frequent job-changing. Secondly, unemployment has not fundamentally changed the 'selective function' of education; credentials have retained their labour-market value in relative if not in absolute terms. Thirdly, the recent rise in school-leaver unemployment is very largely a result of the recession-the decline in the aggregate demand for labour-rather than of underlying structural changes that disadvantage young people; most recent changes in the transition from school to work are in principle reversible if the recession ends. The paper assesses the implications of these findings for the sociology of education, and concludes with a discussion of the possible impact of the Youth Training Scheme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. On Sharpening Sociologists' Prose.
- Author
-
Selvin, Hanan C. and Wilson, Everett K.
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL scientists ,AUTHORSHIP ,TECHNICAL writing ,COMMUNICATION of technical information ,SOCIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
There is an increasing necessity for sociologists to improve their skills in writing sociological research papers. The connection between writing and thinking is close and crucial. Thinking requires symbols, because they are not a sufficient cause of thought but a necessary condition. Therefore, the written version can be brought closer to what one really thinks. Furthermore, writing has a palpability that the ephemeral, spoken word lacks. The concern for effective writing is not a trivial form over content. Good writing is a condition, slowly achieved, of saying what one means to say, of being what one means to be. It is a condition of achieving an adequate professional identity for the community of sociologists.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Importance of Race Among Black Sociologists.
- Author
-
Evans, Art
- Subjects
RACE ,BLACK people ,RACE relations ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGISTS ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper explores the importance of race and racial attitudes among sociologists by attempting to document the existence of what has been called a "black insiders doctrine" and showing that black sociologists are more likely than their white counterparts to subscribe to this doctrine. Data in this paper are based on a survey questionnaire administered during the winter of 1978. The findings show that: (1) race is a strong predictor in determining how sociologists perceive the role and characteristics of black sociologists and (2) black sociologists do not think highly of whites who study race relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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