journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28798522/wealth-inequality-and-accumulation
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Killewald, Fabian T Pfeffer, Jared N Schachner
Research on wealth inequality and accumulation and the data upon which it relies have expanded substantially in the twenty-first century. While the field has experienced rapid growth, conceptual and methodological challenges remain. We begin by discussing two major unresolved methodological concerns facing wealth research: how to address challenges to causal inference posed by wealth's cumulative nature and how to operationalize net worth, given its highly skewed nature. To underscore the need for continued empirical attention to net worth, we review trends in wealth levels and inequality and evaluate wealth's distinctiveness as an indicator of social stratification...
July 2017: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28785123/decision-making-processes-in-social-contexts
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth Bruch, Fred Feinberg
Over the past half-century, scholars in the interdisciplinary field of Judgment and Decision Making have amassed a trove of findings, theories, and prescriptions regarding the processes ordinary people enact when making choices. But this body of knowledge has had little influence on sociology. Sociological research on choice emphasizes how features of the social environment shape individual behavior, not people's underlying decision processes. Our aim in this article is to provide an overview of selected ideas, models, and data sources from decision research that can fuel new lines of inquiry on how socially situated actors navigate both everyday and major life choices...
July 2017: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30089937/the-socioeconomic-demographic-and-political-effects-of-housing-in-comparative-perspective
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jane R Zavisca, Theodore P Gerber
Few sociologists treat housing as a key independent variable, despite the emergence of disparate bodies of research analyzing how housing affects outcomes that traditionally interest sociologists. Scholars across the social sciences have proposed and tested mechanisms whereby housing could shape subjective wellbeing, socioeconomic status, demography, and politics. We review the evidence for causal effects across these domains. Next, we make recommendations for research designs to advance this literature. Most studies only test effects of homeownership, and most are focused on the United States and Western Europe...
July 2016: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30197467/incarceration-and-health
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Massoglia, William Alex Pridemore
The expansion of the penal system has been one of the most dramatic trends in contemporary American society. A wealth of research has examined the impact of incarceration on a range of later life outcomes and has considered how the penal system has emerged as a mechanism of stratification and inequality in the United States. In this article, we review the literature from a comparatively new vein of this research: the impact of incarceration on health outcomes. We first consider the impact of incarceration on a range of individual outcomes, from chronic health conditions to mortality...
August 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30078932/marriage-and-family-in-east-asia-continuity-and-change
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James M Raymo, Hyunjoon Park, Yu Xie, Wei-Jun Jean Yeung
Trends toward later and less marriage and childbearing in East Asia have been even more pronounced than in the West. At the same time, many other features of East Asian families have changed very little. We review recent research on trends in a wide range of family behaviors in China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. We also draw upon a range of theoretical frameworks to argue that trends in marriage and fertility reflect tension between rapid social and economic change and limited change in family expectations and obligations...
August 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29861536/the-environmental-dimensions-of-migration
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lori M Hunter, Jessie K Luna, Rachel M Norton
Research on the environmental dimensions of human migration has made important strides in recent years. However, findings have been spread across multiple disciplines with wide ranging methodologies and limited theoretical development. This article reviews key findings of the field and identifies future directions for sociological research. We contend that the field has moved beyond linear environmental "push" theories towards a greater integration of context, including micro-, meso-, and macro-level interactions...
August 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26855471/the-stigma-complex
#27
Bernice A Pescosolido, Jack K Martin
Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, research on stigma has continued. Building on conceptual and empirical work, the recent period clarifies new types of stigmas, expansion of measures, identification of new directions, and increasingly complex levels. Standard beliefs have been challenged, the relationship between stigma research and public debates reconsidered, and new scientific foundations for policy and programs suggested. We begin with a summary of the most recent Annual Review articles on stigma, which reminded sociologists of conceptual tools, informed them of developments from academic neighbors, and claimed findings from the early period of "resurgence...
August 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26778893/stem-education
#28
Yu Xie, Michael Fang, Kimberlee Shauman
Improving science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education, especially for traditionally disadvantaged groups, is widely recognized as pivotal to the U.S.'s long-term economic growth and security. In this article, we review and discuss current research on STEM education in the U.S., drawing on recent research in sociology and related fields. The reviewed literature shows that different social factors affect the two major components of STEM education attainment: (1) attainment of education in general, and (2) attainment of STEM education relative to non-STEM education conditional on educational attainment...
August 1, 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26336327/the-far-reaching-impact-of-job-loss-and-unemployment
#29
Jennie E Brand
Job loss is an involuntary disruptive life event with a far-reaching impact on workers' life trajectories. Its incidence among growing segments of the workforce, alongside the recent era of severe economic upheaval, has increased attention to the effects of job loss and unemployment. As a relatively exogenous labor market shock, the study of displacement enables robust estimates of associations between socioeconomic circumstances and life outcomes. Research suggests that displacement is associated with subsequent unemployment, long-term earnings losses, and lower job quality; declines in psychological and physical well-being; loss of psychosocial assets; social withdrawal; family disruption; and lower levels of children's attainment and well-being...
August 2015: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30111904/endogenous-selection-bias-the-problem-of-conditioning-on-a-collider-variable
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felix Elwert, Christopher Winship
Endogenous selection bias is a central problem for causal inference. Recognizing the problem, however, can be difficult in practice. This article introduces a purely graphical way of characterizing endogenous selection bias and of understanding its consequences (Hernán et al. 2004). We use causal graphs (direct acyclic graphs, or DAGs) to highlight that endogenous selection bias stems from conditioning (e.g., controlling, stratifying, or selecting) on a so-called collider variable, i.e., a variable that is itself caused by two other variables, one that is (or is associated with) the treatment and another that is (or is associated with) the outcome...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26966338/warmth-of-the-welcome-attitudes-toward-immigrants-and-immigration-policy
#31
Elizabeth Fussell
Natives' attitudes toward immigrants and immigration policy are important factors in the context of reception of immigrants since they contribute to a warm or chilly welcome, which potentially shapes immigrant and ethnic identities and inter-group relations. Public opinion polls show a recent "warming" of Americans' traditional ambivalence about immigration. Empirical research on attitudes toward immigrants and racial groups formed by recent waves of immigrants resonate with the dynamic nature of Blumer's (1958) theory of prejudice as a sense of relative group position...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26504262/race-ethnicity-and-the-changing-context-of-childbearing-in-the-united-states
#32
Megan M Sweeney, R Kelly Raley
In what ways do childbearing patterns in the contemporary United States vary for white, black, and Hispanic women? Why do these differences exist? Although completed family size is currently similar for white and black women, and only modestly larger for Hispanic women, we highlight persistent differences across groups with respect to the timing of childbearing, the relationship context of childbearing, and the extent to which births are intended. We next evaluate key explanations for these differences. Guided by a "proximate determinants" approach, we focus here on patterns of sexual activity, contraceptive use, and post-conception outcomes such as abortion and changes in mothers' relationship status...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25431518/somebody-s-children-or-nobody-s-children-how-the-sociological-perspective-could-enliven-research-on-foster-care
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher Wildeman, Jane Waldfogel
Social scientists have long been concerned about how the fortunes of parents affect their children, with acute interest in the most marginalized children. Yet little sociological research considers children in foster care. In this review, we take a three-pronged approach to show why this inattention is problematic. First, we provide overviews of the history of the foster care system and how children end up in foster care, as well as an estimate of how many children ever enter foster care. Second, we review research on the factors that shape the risk of foster care placement and foster care caseloads and how foster care affects children...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25400321/incarceration-prisoner-reentry-and-communities
#34
Jeffrey D Morenoff, David J Harding
Since the mid-1970s the United States has experienced an enormous rise in incarceration and accompanying increases in returning prisoners and in post-release community correctional supervision. Poor urban communities are disproportionately impacted by these phenomena. This review focuses on two complementary questions regarding incarceration, prisoner reentry, and communities:(1) whether and how mass incarceration has affected the social and economic structure of American communities, and (2) how residential neighborhoods affect the social and economic reintegration of returning prisoners...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25342872/data-visualization-in-sociology
#35
Kieran Healy, James Moody
Visualizing data is central to social scientific work. Despite a promising early beginning, sociology has lagged in the use of visual tools. We review the history and current state of visualization in sociology. Using examples throughout, we discuss recent developments in ways of seeing raw data and presenting the results of statistical modeling. We make a general distinction between those methods and tools designed to help explore datasets, and those designed to help present results to others. We argue that recent advances should be seen as part of a broader shift towards easier sharing of the code and data both between researchers and with wider publics, and encourage practitioners and publishers to work toward a higher and more consistent standard for the graphical display of sociological insights...
July 2014: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28769148/healthcare-systems-in-comparative-perspective-classification-convergence-institutions-inequalities-and-five-missed-turns
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason Beckfield, Sigrun Olafsdottir, Benjamin Sosnaud
This essay reviews and evaluates recent comparative social science scholarship on healthcare systems. We focus on four of the strongest themes in current research: (1) the development of typologies of healthcare systems, (2) assessment of convergence among healthcare systems, (3) problematization of the shifting boundaries of healthcare systems, and (4) the relationship between healthcare systems and social inequalities. Our discussion seeks to highlight the central debates that animate current scholarship and identify unresolved questions and new opportunities for research...
July 2013: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25378767/demographic-change-and-parent-child-relationships-in-adulthood
#37
Judith A Seltzer, Suzanne M Bianchi
Demographic changes in who becomes a parent, how many children parents have, and the marital statuses of parents and children affect the extent to which parents and adult children provide for each other later in life. We describe these demographic changes and their implications for the help parents and children give each other throughout their adult years. The changing demography of US families has increased both generations' need for family assistance among those already disadvantaged and has exacerbated differences between the socioeconomically advantaged and disadvantaged in the availability of kin support...
July 2013: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24489431/the-causal-effects-of-father-absence
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara McLanahan, Laura Tach, Daniel Schneider
The literature on father absence is frequently criticized for its use of cross-sectional data and methods that fail to take account of possible omitted variable bias and reverse causality. We review studies that have responded to this critique by employing a variety of innovative research designs to identify the causal effect of father absence, including studies using lagged dependent variable models, growth curve models, individual fixed effects models, sibling fixed effects models, natural experiments, and propensity score matching models...
July 2013: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24273374/making-a-place-for-space-spatial-thinking-in-social-science
#39
John R Logan
New technologies and multilevel data sets that include geographic identifiers have heightened sociologists' interest in spatial analysis. I review several of the key concepts, measures, and methods that are brought into play in this work, and offer examples of their application in a variety of substantive fields. I argue that the most effective use of the new tools requires greater emphasis on spatial thinking. A device as simple as an illustrative map requires some understanding of how people respond to visual cues; models as complex as HLM with spatial lags require thoughtful measurement decisions and raise questions about what a spatial effect represents...
August 2012: Annual Review of Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23946554/the-future-of-historical-family-demography
#40
Steven Ruggles
An explosion of new data sources describing historical family composition is opening unprecedented opportunities for discovery and analysis. The new data will allow comparative multilevel analysis of spatial patterns and will support studies of the transformation of living arrangements over the past 200 years. Using measurement methods that assess family choices at the individual level and analytic strategies that assess variations across space and time, we can dissect the decline of patriarchal family forms in the developed world, and place Northwestern Europe and North America in global comparative context...
August 2012: Annual Review of Sociology
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