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Showing papers in "Review of Sociology in 1991"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The last two decades of research aimed at improving mail survey methods are examined in this paper, where progress has been made in overcoming four important sources of error: sampling, noncoverage, measurement and nonresponse.
Abstract: For reasons of cost and ease of implementation, mail surveys are more frequently used for social research than are either telephone or face-to-face interviews. In this chapter, the last two decades of research aimed at improving mail survey methods are examined. Discussion of this research is organized around progress made in overcoming four important sources of error: sampling , noncoverage, measurement, and nonresponse. Progress has been especially great in improving response rates as a means of reducing nonresponse error. Significant progress has also been made in finding means of overcoming measurement error. Because mail surveys generally present few, if any, special sampling error problems, little research in this area has been conducted. The lack of research on noncoverage issues is a major deficiency in research to date , and noncoverage error presents the most significant impediment to the increased use of mail surveys. The 1990s are likely to see increased research on mail surveys, as efforts ar...

1,404 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviewed the literature on the neglected role of women in migration and argued that focusing on gender and the family can provide the necessary linkage of micro and macro levels of analyses and contribute to a gendered understanding of the social process of migration.
Abstract: This paper reviews the literature on the neglected role of women in migration. It argues that focusing on gender and the family can provide the necessary linkage of micro and macro levels of analyses. Striving to contribute to a gendered understanding of the social process of migration the review organizes the literature along these major issues: How is gender related to the decision to migrate--i.e. what are the causes and consequences of female or male-dominated flows of migration? What are the patterns of labor market incorporation of women immigrants--i.e. what accounts for their participation in the labor force and their occupational concentration? What is the relationship of the public and the private--i.e. what is the impact of work roles on family roles and of the experience of migration on the immigrants themselves? Throughout the necessity to understand how ethnicity class and gender interact in the process of migration and settlement is stressed. (EXCERPT)

703 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the main theoretical contributions of critical theory, poststructuralism and postmodernism to sociological research have been examined, and the implications of these three theoretical perspectives for the ways sociologists think about the boundaries and territoriality of their discipline are discussed.
Abstract: This article examines the main theoretical contributions of critical theory, poststructuralism and postmodernism. It is argued that these three theories offer related perspectives on the shortcomings of positivism as well as new ways to theorize and study contemporary societies. Empirical and conceptual applications of these perspectives in sociological research are discussed. Some of these applications include work in the sociology of deviance, gender, media and culture. Finally, implications of these three theoretical perspectives for the ways sociologists think about the boundaries and territoriality of their discipline are discussed.

588 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The sociological study of the mental health of racial-ethnic minorities addresses issues of core theoretical and empirical concern to the discipline as discussed by the authors, and identifies conceptual and methodological problems that continue to confront research in this field.
Abstract: The sociological study of the mental health of racial-ethnic minorities addresses issues of core theoretical and empirical concern to the discipline. This review summarizes current knowledge about minority mental health and identifies conceptual and methodological problems that continue to confront research in this field. First, a critique is presented of epidemiological approaches to the definition and measurement of mental health in general, and minority mental health in particular, including an overview of the most frequently used symptom scales and diagnostic protocols. Next, the most important research studies conducted over the past two decades are summarized and discussed, and comparisons of prevalence rates and correlates of depressive symptomatology among Black, Hispanic, Asian, and American Indian ethnic groups are provided. Following the overview of descriptive

470 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Following an examination of empirical studies and measurement issues in the divorce and widowhood literatures, preexisting and direct sources of women's postdissolution economic insecurity are described.
Abstract: We review the literature on the economic consequences of marital dissolution for women. Longitudinal studies of the effects of divorce and widowhood indicate that both types of dissolutions have negative and prolonged consequences for women's economic well-being. This is not the case for men, where marital dissolution often leads to an improved economic standard of living. Following an examination of empirical studies and measurement issues in the divorce and widowhood literatures, we describe preexisting and direct sources of women's postdissolution economic insecurity. Women's postdissolution economic hardship is due to multiple interrelated factors, often only superficially coupled with the marital dissolution event. In particular, the division of labor during marriage, lower wages paid to women both during and after marriage, and the lack of adequate postdissolution transfers to women imply that unless changes in women's work roles are mirrored by social policy initiatives and men's assumption of equa...

383 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of ethnomethodological research from the past three decades can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the diversity each of the subfields represents, clarify distinctions between them, and demonstrate assumptions they share.
Abstract: Our purpose is to review the enormous range of ethnomethodological research from the past three decades. Periodically, scholars have produced review articles, monographs, and position papers that usually promote or critique the work of a particular ethnomethodological subfield. Also, textbook and other accounts of ethnomethodology sometimes impose a homogeneity on the field that neglects the various theoretical and methodological strands. We attempt to articulate the diversity each of the subfields represents, to clarify distinctions between them, and to demonstrate assumptions they share. The areas we discuss include theory, phenomenology, cognition, conversation analysis, research in institutional settings, studies of science, and applied research. While debates about proper topics and methods of research will no doubt continue, underneath such debates are a shared orientation to an extant, achieved orderliness in everyday activities and a commitment to discovering organizational features of direct inte...

311 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the functional, conflict, and cultural studies perspectives are reviewed, with additional discussion on how sport relates to the processes of socialization and social change, focusing on the evolution of sport from a playful, participation-oriented activity to one that resembles a corporate form guided by the principles of commercialism and entertainment.
Abstract: Sport is a very prominent social institution in almost every society because it combines the characteristics found in any institution with a unique appeal only duplicated by, perhaps, religion. The functional, conflict, and cultural studies perspectives are reviewed, with additional discussion on how sport relates to the processes of socialization and social change. The latter focusses on the evolution of sport from a playful, participation-oriented activity to one that resembles a corporate form guided by the principles of commercialism and entertainment. The role of sport in international relations and national development dramatizes the political meaning of sport to many societies. While sport may be integrative at the higher political levels, it has not been so at the interpersonal levels of gender and race. The inequality that characterizes society's relations of gender and race is found in sport as well. The sociology of sport will be able to shed more light on all of these issues when theory informs more of the research in this subfield.

305 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the literature on organizational ecology, economics, institutional sociology, strategic management, and organizational ecology can be found in this paper, where three perspectives appear to capture most of the arguments: an organizational genetics view, which emphasizes random variation; an environmental conditioning approach, which considers variation to be co...
Abstract: Rather quietly over the last decade, a large body of literature has emerged to consider how new forms of organization arise and become established in the organizational community. The literature represents a very wide array of theoretical perspectives, and no emerging consensus or dominant theme can plausibly be identified. No long stream of research has been produced to validate the arguments of any perspective. What we find instead is a disparate group of mostly nascent theories from organizational ecology, economics, institutional sociology, strategic management, and others, all seeking to explicate the nature of contexts and processes that may generate new organizational forms. This review organizes this literature according to assumptions about how variations are generated in the organizational community. Three perspectives appear to capture most of the arguments: an organizational genetics view, which emphasizes random variation; an environmental conditioning view, which considers variation to be co...

296 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the process leading to legislative enactment of policy change and assesses issues and findings in three aspects of the political process: agenda setting, the development of policy proposals, and the struggle for adoption of particular proposals.
Abstract: Sociologists interested in politics have increasingly turned in recent years to the study of policy domains—components of the political system organized around substantive issues. This review focuses on the process leading to legislative enactment of policy change and assesses issues and findings in three aspects of the political process: agenda setting. the development of policy proposals, and the struggle for adoption of particular proposals. Quite a bit is known about adoption of proposals, but relatively little work has been done on agenda setting, and the task of understanding the development of policy proposals has barely begun. Policy change is affected most directly by formal organizations whose activities are channeled and given meaning by culture; government organizations play an active role in formulating policy and deciding how it will be implemented as well.

290 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors reviewed 40 years of cross-national comparative research on the intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic advantage, with particulax attention to developments over the past 15 years, since the transition between (what have become known as) the second and third generations of social stratification and mobility research.
Abstract: In this article we review 40 years of cross-national comparative research on the intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic advantage, with particulax attention to developments over the past 15 years--that is, since the transition between (what have become known as) the second and third generations of social stratification and mobility research. We identify the genera1During the preparation of this paper Ganzeboom held a Huygens Scholarship from the Netherlands’ Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), and was a Visiting Scholar in the Department of Sociology, University of California at Los Angeles.

282 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors reviewed recent developments in the analysis of business power and the corporate elite, focussing on those approaches rooted in the techniques of social network analysis, and argued that results from these studies cannot be generalized across all societies.
Abstract: This paper reviews recent developments in the analysis of business power and the corporate elite, focussing on those approaches rooted in the techniques of social network analysis. A typology of research strategies is outlined, and this is illustrated through discussions of North American studies. It is argued that results from these studies cannot be generalized across all societies. This is illustrated with reference to European and Asian studies, where a number of variant patterns of corporate development can be discerned. Particular attention is given to Japan and the development of its pattern of corporate organization, which contrasts sharply with the dominant Anglo-American pattern.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review of interdisciplinary research first traces the trends and dimensions of urbanization in developing countries and then discusses major theories guiding global urban studies, concluding that severe underspecification, the dearth of comparative statistics on critical dimensions, and the ambiguity of proxy variables hinder research in this area.
Abstract: Few aspects of international social change have generated as much scholarship as patterns of urbanization in the Third World. In this review of interdisciplinary research, we first trace the trends and dimensions of urbanization in developing countries and then discuss major theories guiding global urban studies. Second, we review and critique recent cross-national investigations of the determinants of urbanization and its dimensions, concluding that severe underspecification, the dearth of comparative statistics on critical dimensions, and the ambiguity of proxy variables hinder research in this area. Finally, we discuss issues that warrant additional investigation in the near future,

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the many levels at which family interaction is currently being studied, presents arguments regarding expected relationships between aspects of workplace experiences and spousal and parent-child interaction, and summarizes the relatively small body of empirical research that links occupation and family interaction.
Abstract: Until recently little theoretical or empirical attention has focused on the ways in which socially structured experiences in the workplace affect the interactions that occur within families This review considers the many levels at which family interaction is currently being studied, presents arguments regarding expected relationships between aspects of workplace experiences and spousal and parent-child interaction, and summarizes the relatively small body of empirical research that links occupation and family interaction It emphasizes the extent to which emotional consequences of work mediate the effect of workplace conditions on family interaction The chapter reviews evidence suggesting that a variety of workplace conditions—restriction of opportunity to exercise self-direction, work overload, poor quality of interpersonal relations on the job, low opportunity for cooperative problemsolving, job insecurities, job loss, and low earnings—have emotional repercussions that have negative implications for f

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review examines one of the most fundamental issues of family history, the nature of domestic groups in which people lived in the past, focusing on the evolution of family forms in Europe.
Abstract: This review examines one of the most fundamental issues of family history, the nature of domestic groups in which people lived in the past. The focus is further limited to the evolution of family forms in Europe. Although such models as those originally proposed by Laslett and Hajnal for western family history have been shown to be wanting, they have served an invaluable role in stimulating and guiding family history research. We are now able to begin to grasp the contours of a much more complex western family heritage than earlier scholars recognized.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors examines the urban underclass, the latest effort to analyze, categorize, and react to poverty in America, concluding that "the poor, a stratum recruited from heterogeneous origins, belong to a common category by virtue of an essentially passive trait" (Coser 1965:142).
Abstract: Writing in 1965, Lewis Coser observed, “The poor, a stratum recruited from heterogeneous origins, belong to a common category by virtue of an essentially passive trait, namely that society reacts to them in a particular manner” (Coser 1965:142). This review examines the “urban underclass,” the latest effort to analyze, categorize, and react to poverty in America. It begins with a discussion of the continuing and pervasive appeal of cultural explanations as the root cause of poverty, perspectives which boast a myriad of scholarly proponents from the right and increasingly from the left. Structural theories, which by contrast find explanation for poverty in various, sometimes conflicting changes in the economy and have an equally loyal following, are also examined. A third, ethnographic approach with antecedents in the prior work of Liebow, Howell, and Stack is explored. This emerging perspective both embraces and eschews different elements of the other two, attempting to ignore labels and understand instea...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Schumpeter's History of Economic Analysis as mentioned in this paper traces not only the history of economic theory but also that of economic sociology and sociologists have made important contributions to economic sociology.
Abstract: Not only sociologists but also economists have made important contributions to economic sociology. Which particular works by economists are relevant in this context is indicated with the help of Schumpeter's History of Economic Analysis, a work unique in that it traces not only the history of economic theory but also that of economic sociology. Three main traditions appear in economic sociology, which are still fairly unexplored: the German tradition of Wirtschajissoziologie (1890-1930), the French tradition of sociologie economique (1890-1930), and the US tradition of “economy and society” (1950s). Since the 1970s a revival of interest in economic institutions has occurred especially in the United States, and a new economic sociology has come into being. Both economists and sociologists helped to create this new economic sociology. Economists have developed an approach known as New Institutional Economics. The main idea here is to explain the emergence and functioning of economic institutions with the he...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the most important conceptual strands and examine new research in state formation, state's role in economic development, and the state's relation to social movements and ethnic identity formation.
Abstract: Comparative work on the state, in terms of both new cases and general theoretical frameworks, has proliferated in the last decade. In this new work, traditional categories of differentiation such as structural-functionalism, Marxism, and pluralism have lost relevance and have been replaced by common conceptual strands that infuse every subfield of research on the state. In this review we select the most important conceptual strands and examine new research in state formation, the state's role in economic development, and the state's relation to social movements and ethnic identity formation. Despite the frequent criticism that the state is the only explanatory variable in these studies, we find that the literature has always recognized that statesociety relations are critical to understanding state action.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of recent sociological research focusing on two sets of enduring questions to which this research has been addressed is presented in this article, where the authors focus on the socioeconomic and political impact of the U.S. labor movement, i.e. its impact on worker livelihoods and life chances and social inequality, as well as its universalizing effects on the determinants of inequality.
Abstract: The proliferation of research on the US labor movement has created opportunities for the development of theory on labor action. Such theory would account for variations in the development, structure, ideology, goals, functions, social composition, and societal impact of labor unions and, more generally, the labor movement. This review of recent sociological research focuses on two sets of enduring questions to which this research has been addressed. The first concerns the development of the U. S. labor movement—that is, its connection to industrialization; its internal organizational and ideological development; and worker predispositions to unionize and conduct strikes. The second pertains to the socioeconomic and political impact of the U.S. labor movement—i. e. its impact on worker livelihoods and life chances and social inequality, as well as its universalizing effects on the determinants of inequality; and, its impact on working class political participation and the shaping of social policy. This rev...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper reviewed the recent work of several behavioral and social science disciplines concerned with the impact of war upon society, suggesting that the study of war's social ramifications has been characterized by the publication of empirical work that neglects, to some extent, the larger sociological implications of war as well as its ability to reorder society.
Abstract: The authors, by reviewing the recent work of several behavioral and social science disciplines concerned with the impact of war upon society, suggest that the study of war’s social ramifications has been characterized by the publication of empirical work that neglects, to some extent, the larger sociological implications of war as well as its ability to reorder society. The work published over the last two decades and reviewed here was written in the United States in the wake of the Vietnam conflict. This work has examined the implications of military manpower recruitment and training, as well as the psychological and economic implications of wartime service. The immediacy of this conflict, however, may have deterred sociological analysts from systematically examining the macroscopic implications of social change, a void that is remedied, in part, by historical and literary analyses that consider the long-range impacts of past wars on their belligerent societies. Finally, the authors propose that the stud...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The women's movement in the 1960s presents two challenges to sociology: the first is the analysis of a social movement: how did private problems get transformed into a collective protest at a particular historical moment? as mentioned in this paper addresses itself to the contribution of social movement to the sociology of sociology.
Abstract: The emergence of the women’s movement in the 1960s presents two challenges to sociology. The more obvious task is the analysis of a social movement: How did private problems get transformed into a collective protest at that particular historical moment? This article, however, addresses itself to the contribution of a social movement to the sociology of sociology. Feminist sociologists, in representing a disadvantaged group, claim to look at society from a new angle of vision. What was the impact upon the discipline of sociology of this new perspective? Feminist criticism of mainstream sociology revealed not only vast lacunae in our knowledge but flawed interpretations of social phenomena. Feminist theoreticians have extended their criticism to some epistomelogical positions of contemporary American sociology. The purpose of this article is two-fold. It illustrates some contributions to sociology by feminist scholars (including a few precursors). Secondly, some changing trends in feminist orientations are ...


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mead as mentioned in this paper reinterpreted Cooley's theory of self along the lines of the pragmatic functionalism of Dewey and social behaviorism, which was formulated in his famous conception of the "looking-glass self".
Abstract: As Durkheim said, Pragmatism was a different style of thought from European rationalist tradition. William James questioned the basic premises of Cartesian subject. His major innovation was to regard not only the “external world” but also the “self” as object. Cooley realized that one's self cannot be understood without reference to his interpretation of how others see him. This view was formulated in his famous conception of the “looking-glass self”. Mead reinterpreted Cooley's theory of self along the lines of the pragmatic functionalism of Dewey and social behaviorism. How one can see himself as others see him? For Cooley, it was possible through “imagination” pepople have one another, for Mead, by “significant symbol”.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Weber's sociological fundamental categories define each other and clarify the meanings of some differences between "About Some Categories of Understanding Sociology" and "The Fundamental Concepts of Sociology".
Abstract: In this paper we try to consider how Weber's sociological fundamental categories define each other. For this purpose we have to clarify the meanings of some differences between “About Some Categories of Understanding Sociology” and “The Fundamental Concepts of Sociology”. Some matters of importance exist in some relationships between ‘compulsory association’ and ‘voluntary agreement’, ‘value-rationality’ and ‘associative relationship’, ‘(mutual) understanding’ and ‘end-rationality’, etc. Through solving these problems we will be able to comprehend his sociological thought more systematically.