journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22171365/social-focus-on-health-and-children%C3%A2-s-well-being
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Loretta E Bass
This special section on children’s health and well-being is an outgrowth of the 2010 International Sociological Association’s (ISA) World Congress in Gothenburg, Sweden. Within the Congress, the Research Committee 53, Sociology of Childhood, organized a panel focused on the health and well-being of children. Together, this collection makes two distinct contributions: first in terms of considering children’s health disparities as an area of concern within sociology, and second by considering children’s health as a factor that shapes other areas of children’s well-being...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22171364/beliefs-about-alcohol-and-the-college-experience-locus-of-self-and-college-undergraduates%C3%A2-drinking-patterns
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lizabeth A Crawford, Katherine B Novak
The purpose of this study is to assess the extent to which locus of self (institutional versus impulse), measured using the Twenty Statements Test (TST), moderates the relationship between beliefs about alcohol and the college experience (BACE) and alcohol use among college undergraduates. Although the majority of our respondents listed more idiosyncratic personal characteristics and preferences than consensual social roles in response to the TST, the number of students classified as institutionals was notably higher than what has been reported within the literature...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22073407/racetalk-and-sport-the-color-consciousness-of-contemporary-discourse-on-basketball
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Buffington, Todd Fraley
This article explores how a sample of college students discursively negotiated perceptions of race and ability in the context of mediated sport. A majority of respondents expressed acceptance of a link between racial identity and sport-specific skills. However, rather than articulate this notion overtly and directly, rhetorical strategies, such as disclaimers and coded language, were used. We analyze these responses as a form of “racetalk” (Bonilla-Silva and Forman 2000) to more specifically unpack the significance of discourse within the post-Civil Rights Movement era...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22073406/it%C3%A2-s-not-only-for-the-money-an-analysis-of-adolescent-versus-adult-entry-into-street-prostitution
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer E Cobbina, Sharon S Oselin
Numerous studies examine the causal factors of entrance into prostitution and find economic marginalization, substance addiction, and interpersonal networks are common reasons women enter the trade. However, we know less about the role that age of onset plays in shaping female pathways into prostitution. Here, we build from insights into previous research by analyzing not only entry pathways but also how age categories are linked to time spent in the trade and whether the length of time in prostitution exacts a greater “toll” on women...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22073405/watching-over-baby-expectant-parenthood-and-the-duty-to-be-well
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Paff Ogle, Keila E Tyner, Sherry Schofield-Tomschin
In contemporary Western society, individuals are encouraged to adopt a “duty to be well ideology” by assuming personal responsibility for health through engagement in self-care practices. We explored the duty to be well within the contexts of pregnancy, first-time parenthood, and marriage. Analyses were informed by Foucault’s work on surveillance. In-depth interviews were conducted during the 7th or 8th month of pregnancy with 14 married couples expecting their first child. The sample was recruited from two U...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21858932/joint-physical-custody-and-neighborhood-friendships-in-middle-childhood
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariana Prazen, Nicholas H Wolfinger, Caitlin Cahill, Lori Kowaleski-Jones
Almost half of first marriages end in divorce, which in turn may produce joint physical custody arrangements. Seen by many states to be in the best interest of the child, joint physical custody is increasingly common. Yet much is unknown about its consequences for children. This article considers how joint physical custody arrangements affect children’s neighborhood friendships, an important component of child well-being because of their contributions to social and cognitive development. Thirteen parents and 17 children (aged 5–11) in 10 families, selected via convenience and snowball sampling, participated in semistructured interviews...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21858930/direct-and-vicarious-violent-victimization-and-juvenile-delinquency-an-application-of-general-strain-theory
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wen-Hsu Lin, John K Cochran, Thomas Mieczkowski
Using a national probability sample of adolescents (12–17), this study applies general strain theory to how violent victimization, vicarious violent victimization, and dual violent victimization affect juvenile violent/property crime and drug use. In addition, the mediating effect and moderating effect of depression, low social control, and delinquent peer association on the victimization–delinquency relationship is also examined. Based on SEM analyses and contingency tables, the results indicate that all three types of violent victimization have significant and positive direct effects on violent/property crime and drug use...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21858929/non-governmental-organizations-democracy-and-hiv-prevalence-a-cross-national-analysis
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric J Shircliff, John M Shandra
Despite the scale, reach, and global impact of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), its study has remained largely at the purview of various micro-level analyses (e.g., Gutmann 2007; Levi and Vitória 2002). However, differences in prevalence rates at the national level suggest that other forces might be at work. Following the work of McIntosh and Thomas (2004), the only cross-national study of HIV/AIDS published to our knowledge, we conduct a cross-national analysis that examines world polity ideas that higher levels of health and women’s non-governmental organizations (NGOs) should be associated with lower levels of HIV prevalence...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21528020/cohabitation-parents-following-in-their-children-s-footsteps
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren Rinelli McClain
As cohabitation has risen dramatically in the past few decades among adults of all ages, it is possible that middle-and older-aged parents are “learning” cohabitation from their young adult children. The present study uses this theory as a guiding framework to determine if parents are more likely to cohabit themselves following the start of a young adult child’s cohabitation. Using three waves of the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 275), results show that union formation patterns are influenced by young adult children among parents who are single at their child’s 18th birthday...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337740/investigating-customer-racial-discrimination-in-the-secondary-baseball-card-market
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric Primm, Nicole Leeper Piquero, Alex R Piquero, Robert M Regoli
A growing body of literature in a variety of disciplines has appeared over the last 20 years examining customer racial bias in the secondary sports card market; however, consensus on the matter has yet to emerge. In this article, we explore the more subtle ways that a player's race/ethnicity may affect the value of his sports card including a player's skin tone (light- to dark-skinned). Data were obtained for 383 black, Latino, and white baseball players who had received at least one vote for induction into Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame including their career performance statistics, rookie card price, card availability, Hall of Fame status, and skin tone...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337739/the-northern-%C3%A2-black-metropolis%C3%A2-of-the-early-twentieth-century-a-reappraisal
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert L Boyd
The new perspective of the "Black Metropolis" implies that conditions created by the Great Migration helped blacks in northern cities to establish themselves in professional, entrepreneurial, and artistic, entertainment and mass media occupations. The present study evaluates this argument with Census data, focusing on the nation's largest black communities, Harlem (New York) and Bronzeville (Chicago), at time points that capture the first wave of the Great Migration. Contrary to expectations, the odds of black employment in the aforesaid occupations declined or remained essentially unchanged in both communities over the study period...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337738/familiarity-legitimation-and-frequency-the-influence-of-others-on-the-criminal-self-view
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily K Asencio
From an identity theory perspective, reflected appraisals from others are relevant for social behavior, because behavior is motivated by the desire to achieve congruence between reflected appraisals and the self-view for a particular identity. This study extends prior identity theory work from the laboratory setting by examining identity processes with respect to the criminal identity in the unique “natural” setting of a total institution. The findings build on prior work which finds that reflected appraisals do have an influence on identities and behavior by demonstrating that the relationship one has to the source of reflected appraisals is important for the way in which reflected appraisals influence the criminal self-view for an incarcerated population...
2011: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20879181/church-place-and-crime-latinos-and-homicide-in-new-destinations
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Edward S Shihadeh, Lisa Winters
Latinos are moving beyond traditional areas and settling in new, potentially disorganized destinations. Without an established immigrant community, new destinations appear to rely more on the local religious ecology to regulate community life and to keep crime low. We examine the link between religious ecology and Latino homicide victimization for traditional and new destination counties. We observe four findings. (1) A Catholic presence has no effect on Latino violence in the old and well-organized traditional settlement areas...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20879179/beyond-the-depleting-model-of-parenting-narratives-of-childrearing-and-change
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer M Silva, Allison J Pugh
A great deal of scholarship investigates the effects of parenting on adults who parent. While existing literature has identified the ways in which parenting affects parents adversely, we argue that more attention needs to be paid to how having children may enhance parents’ lives. Thus, we draw upon twenty-four in-depth interviews with young parents in order to investigate this process. First, we identify five ways in which parents say caregiving has changed their worldviews, relationships, and expectations, leading them to 1) erect barriers, 2) aspire for more, 3) view parenthood as a second chance, 4) hew a new path, and 5) make connections...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20879178/family-transitions-and-juvenile-delinquency
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan D Schroeder, Aurea K Osgood, Michael J Oghia
There is a large body of research that shows children from non-intact homes show higher rates of juvenile delinquency than children from intact homes, partially due to weaker parental control and supervision in non-intact homes. What has not been adequately addressed in the research is the influence of changes in family structure among individual adolescents over time on delinquent offending. Using the first and third waves of the National Youth Study, we assess the effect of family structure changes on changes in delinquent offending between waves through the intermediate process of changes in family time and parental attachment...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20879177/marching-toward-reproductive-justice-coalitional-re-framing-of-the-march-for-women-s-lives
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zakiya T Luna
This article examines how coalition frames develop and what happens to that frame after the formal coalition ends. To that end, I analyze the frame shift around the 2004 March for Women's Lives (March). The March initially focused on established ideas of reproductive rights around which the four national mainstream co-sponsors previously organized. However, after a newer reproductive justice organization joined the coalition, material and organizing reflected a shift in framing to reproductive justice. How did this change happen? What are the impacts of this event for the women's movement? Through document analysis and interviews, I trace the negotiations that facilitated this framing shift...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20879176/fathering-an-adhd-child-an-examination-of-paternal-well-being-and-social-support
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Patricia E Neff
The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of having a child diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) on the social and emotional well-being of fathers. While mothers have been carefully scrutinized in ADHD-related literature, fathers have been largely excluded from research designs developed to explore the effects of raising a child with ADHD. Prior research has been primarily based on small, clinically referred and homogenous samples, often without comparisons or controls...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20827859/hurricane-katrina-and-mental-health-a-research-note-on-mississippi-gulf-coast-residents
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Steven Picou, Kenneth Hudson
Katrina was the most devastating and deadliest hurricane in recent U.S. history. The storm was particularly destructive for residents of the Mississippi Gulf Coast where sustained winds of 135 mph and a storm surge of 32 feet literally obliterated the built and modified environments. Limited research exists on the chronic (32 months) mental health impacts of survivors in this geographical area. Random-digit dialing telephone surveys were administered in Harrison and Hancock counties (Mississippi) in April and May 2008 and data were collected on a number of mental health outcomes...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20827858/environmental-risks-and-environmental-justice-or-how-titanic-risks-are-not-so-titanic-after-all
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margarita V Alario, William R Freudenburg
Some of the best-known social scientific theories of risks are those that have been elaborated by Anthony Giddens and Ulrich Beck. Although their arguments differ greatly, they agree in seeing the technologically induced risks of today's "Risk Society" as global - so pervasive that they transcend all socioeconomic as well as geopolitical and national boundaries. Most empirical work, however, provides greater support for a theoretical tradition exemplified by Short and Erikson. In this paper, we argue that many of the technological mega-risks described by Giddens and Beck as "transcending" social boundaries are better described as "Titanic risks," referring not so much to their colossal impact as to the fact that - as was the case for the majority of the victims on the Titanic - actual risks are related to victims' socioeconomic as well as sociogeographic locations...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20827857/gender-and-the-transmission-of-civic-engagement-assessing-the-influences-on-youth-civic-activity
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd L Matthews, Lynn M Hempel, Frank M Howell
The study of civic activity has become a central focus for many social scientists over the past decade, generating considerable research and debate. Previous studies have largely overlooked the role of youth socialization into civic life, most notably in the settings of home and school. Further, differences along gender lines in civic capacity have not been given sufficient attention in past studies. This study adds to the literature by examining the potential pathways in the development of youth civic activity and potential, utilizing both gender-neutral and gender-specific structural equation modeling of data from the 1996 National Household Education Survey...
2010: Sociological Inquiry
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