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Identity as a Variable

TLDR
The authors define collective identity as a social category that varies along two dimensions -content and contestation, and compare collective identities according to the agreement and disagreement about their meanings by the members of the group.
Abstract
As scholarly interest in the concept of identity continues to grow, social identities are proving to be crucially important for understanding contemporary life. Despite - or perhaps because of - the sprawl of different treatments of identity in the social sciences, the concept has remained too analytically loose to be as useful a tool as the literature's early promise had suggested. We propose to solve this longstanding problem by developing the analytical rigor and methodological imagination that will make identity a more useful variable for the social sciences. This article offers more precision by defining collective identity as a social category that varies along two dimensions - content and contestation. Content describes the meaning of a collective identity. The content of social identities may take the form of four non-mutually exclusive types: constitutive norms; social purposes; relational comparisons with other social categories; and cognitive models. Contestation refers to the degree of agreement within a group over the content of the shared category. Our conceptualization thus enables collective identities to be compared according to the agreement and disagreement about their meanings by the members of the group. The final section of the article looks at the methodology of identity scholarship. Addressing the wide array of methodological options on identity - including discourse analysis, surveys, and content analysis, as well as promising newer methods like experiments, agent-based modeling, and cognitive mapping - we hope to provide the kind of brush clearing that will enable the field to move forward methodologically as well.

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The measurement of meaning

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Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (review)

Richard Walter
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
TL;DR: Chung et al. as discussed by the authors present a history and theory reader of the New Media/Old Media: A History and Theory Reader, focusing on early film history and multi-media.
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Unipolarity, Status Competition, and Great Power War

TL;DR: This article argued that even capabilities distributions among major powers foster ambiguous status hierarchies, which generate more dissatisfaction and clashes over the status quo, and the more stratified the distribution of capabilities, the less likely such status competition is.
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Race as a Bundle of Sticks: Designs that Estimate Effects of Seemingly Immutable Characteristics

TL;DR: This article argued that race should be disaggregated into elements and that causal claims may be made using two designs: (a) studies that measure the effect of exposure to a racial cue and (b) studies exploiting within-group variation.
References
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Book

Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism

TL;DR: In this paper, Anderson examines the creation and global spread of the 'imagined communities' of nationality and explores the processes that created these communities: the territorialisation of religious faiths, the decline of antique kingship, the interaction between capitalism and print, the development of vernacular languages-of-state, and changing conceptions of time.
Book

The Measurement of Meaning

TL;DR: In this article, the authors deal with the nature and theory of meaning and present a new, objective method for its measurement which they call the semantic differential, which can be adapted to a wide variety of problems in such areas as clinical psychology, social psychology, linguistics, mass communications, esthetics, and political science.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rediscovering the social group: A self-categorization theory.

TL;DR: In this paper, a self-categorization theory is proposed to discover the social group and the importance of social categories in the analysis of social influence, and the Salience of social Categories is discussed.
Book

Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing Data

TL;DR: This book discusses the design and implementation of the Responsive Interviewing Model, and some of the techniques used, as well as personal reflections on Responsive interviewing.
Book

The Content Analysis Guidebook

TL;DR: The Content Analysis Guidebook provides an accessible core text for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students across the social sciences that unravels the complicated aspects of content analysis.