journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22616117/the-influence-of-world-societal-forces-on-social-tolerance-a-time-comparative-study-of-prejudices-in-32-countries
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Markus Hadler
Societal variation in xenophobia, homophobia, and other prejudices is frequently explained by the economic background and political history of different countries. This article expands these explanations by considering the influence of world societal factors on individual attitudes. The empirical analysis is based on survey data collected within the World Value Survey and European Values Study framework between 1989 and 2010. Data are combined to a three-wave cross-sectional design including about 130,000 respondents from 32 countries...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22616115/race-and-imprisonments-vigilante-violence-minority-threat-and-racial-politics
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Jacobs, Chad Malone, Gale Iles
The effects of lynchings on criminal justice outcomes have seldom been examined. Recent findings also are inconsistent about the effects of race on imprisonments. This study uses a pooled time-series design to assess lynching and racial threat effects on state imprisonments from 1972 to 2000. After controlling for Republican strength, conservatism, and other factors, lynch rates explain the growth in admission rates. The findings also show that increases in black residents produce subsequent expansions in imprisonments that likely are attributable to white reactions to this purported menace...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22616114/isolated-in-a-technologically-connected-world-changes-in-the-core-professional-ties-of-female-researchers-in-ghana-kenya-and-kerala-india
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
B Paige Miller, Wesley Shrum
Using panel data gathered across two waves (2001 and 2005) from researchers in Ghana, Kenya, and Kerala, India, we examine three questions: (1) To what extent do gender differences exist in the core professional networks of scientists in low-income areas? (2) How do gender differences shift over time? (3) Does use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) mediate the relationship between gender and core network composition? Our results indicate that over a period marked by dramatic increases in access to and use of various ICTs, the composition and size of female researchers core professional ties have either not changed significantly or have changed in an unexpected direction...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22363950/-keeping-our-mission-changing-our-system-translation-and-organizational-change-in-natural-foods-co-ops
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael A Haedicke
Institutional theory has played a central role in the study of organizations for over half a century, but it often overlooks the actions of the people who bring organizations to life. This article advances an inhabited approach to institutional analysis that foregrounds the creativity of organizational members. It argues that people use local cultures to translate and respond to institutional pressures. The article analyzes qualitative data from countercultural co-op stores that have been pushed to conform to mainstream forms of business organization by a competitive market and demonstrates that translation explains why outcomes that institutional theory would not predict have come to pass...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22329059/confrontations-and-donations-encounters-between-homeless-pet-owners-and-the-public
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leslie Irvine, Kristina N Kahl, Jesse M Smith
This study examines the interactions between homeless pet owners and the domiciled public with a focus on how the activities of pet ownership help construct positive personal identities. Homeless people are often criticized for having pets. They counter these attacks using open and contained responses to stigmatization. More often, they redefine pet ownership to incorporate how they provide for their animals, challenging definitions that require a physical home. Homeless pet owners thus create a positive moral identity by emphasizing that they feed their animals first and give them freedom that the pets of the domiciled lack...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22329058/we-really-are-all-multiculturalists-now
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Kivisto
Treating multiculturalism as a social fact, this article develops the argument that it ought to be construed as a form of political claims-making advanced by spokespersons on behalf of what can be described as communities of fate. After brief examinations of the claims-makers and those groups that claims are made on behalf of, five types of claims are analyzed: (1) exemption, (2) accommodation, (3) preservation, (4) redress, and (5) inclusion. This leads to a concluding section devoted to analyzing the politics of identity as constituting an effort to ovecome the burdens of stigmatization, with a focus on the respective contributions of Goffman, Taylor, and Alexander...
2012: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22175067/how-culture-shapes-community-bible-belief-theological-unity-and-a-sense-of-belonging-in-religious-congregations
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel Stroope
Feeling that you belong in a group is an important and powerful need. The ability to foster a sense of belonging can also determine whether groups survive. Organizational features of groups cultivate feelings of belonging, yet prior research fails to investigate the idea that belief systems also play a major role. Using multilevel data, this study finds that church members' traditional beliefs, group-level belief unity, and their interaction associate positively with members' sense of belonging. In fact, belief unity can be thought of as a “sacred canopy” under which the relationship between traditional beliefs and feelings of belonging thrives...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22175066/playful-biometrics-controversial-technology-through-the-lens-of-play
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariane Ellerbrok
This article considers the role of play in the context of technological emergence and expansion, particularly as it relates to recently emerging surveillance technologies. As a case study, I consider the trajectory of automated face recognition—a biometric technology of numerous applications, from its more controversial manifestations under the rubric of national security to a clearly emerging orientation toward play. This shift toward “playful” biometrics—or from a technology traditionally coded as “hard” to one now increasingly coded as “soft”—is critical insofar as it renders problematic the traditional modes of critique that have, up until this point, challenged the expansion of biometric systems into increasingly ubiquitous realms of everyday life...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22175065/local-practice-and-global-data-loyalty-cards-social-practices-and-consumer-surveillance
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nils Zurawski
Monitoring of consumers has become the most widespread mode of surveillance today. Being a multi-billion dollar business, the collected data are traded globally without much concern by the consumers themselves. Loyalty cards are an element with which such data are collected. Analyzing the role of loyalty cards in everyday practices such as shopping, I discuss how new modes of surveillance evolve and work and why they eventually make communication about data protection a difficult matter. Further, I will propose an alternative approach to the study of surveillance...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22175064/surveillance-as-cultural-practice
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Torin Monahan
This special section of The Sociological Quarterly explores research on “surveillance as cultural practice,” which indicates an orientation to surveillance that views it as embedded within, brought about by, and generative of social practices in specific cultural contexts. Such an approach is more likely to include elements of popular culture, media, art, and narrative; it is also more likely to try to comprehend people's engagement with surveillance on their own terms, stressing the production of emic over etic forms of knowledge...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22081800/limited-access-gender-occupational-composition-and-flexible-work-scheduling
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Glauber
The current study draws on national data to explore differences in access to flexible work scheduling by the gender composition of women's and men's occupations. Results show that those who work in integrated occupations are more likely to have access to flexible scheduling. Women and men do not take jobs with lower pay in return for greater access to flexibility. Instead, jobs with higher pay offer greater flexibility. Integrated occupations tend to offer the greatest access to flexible scheduling because of their structural locations...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22081799/consequences-of-black-exceptionalism-interracial-unions-with-blacks-depressive-symptoms-and-relationship-satisfaction
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rhiannon A Kroeger, Kristi Williams
Using data from Wave 4 (2008) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (N = 7,466), we examine potential consequences of black exceptionalism in the context of interracial relationships among nonblack respondents. While increasing racial diversity and climbing rates of interracial unions have fostered the notion that racial boundaries within the United States are fading, our results add to the accumulating evidence that racial/ethnic boundaries persist in U.S. society. Results suggest that among non-Black respondents there is more stigma and disapproval attached to relationships with Blacks than there are to relationships with members of other racial/ethnic groups...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22081798/the-uneven-patterning-of-welfare-benefits-at-the-twilight-of-afdc-assessing-the-influence-of-institutions-race-and-citizen-preferences
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ben Lennox Kail, Marc Dixon
Scholars have been slow to test welfare state theories on the extensive subnational variation in the United States during the recent period of retrenchment. We assess institutional politics theories, literature on race and social policy, and public opinion arguments relative to levels of support in states' Aid to Families Dependent Children programs from 1982 until its elimination in 1996. Pooled time-series results demonstrate that the determinants of spending during retrenchment are mostly similar to those driving development and expansion...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22081797/school-discipline-and-disruptive-classroom-behavior-the-moderating-effects-of-student-perceptions
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra M Way
This study examines the relationship between school discipline and student classroom behavior. A traditional deterrence framework predicts that more severe discipline will reduce misbehavior. In contrast, normative perspectives suggest that compliance depends upon commitment to rules and authority, including perceptions of fairness and legitimacy. Using school and individual-level data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 and multilevel regression modeling, the author finds support for the normative perspective...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21910274/community-influences-on-white-racial-attitudes-what-matters-and-why
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marylee C Taylor, Peter J Mateyka
Tracing the roots of racial attitudes in historical events and individual biographies has been a long-standing goal of race relations scholars. Recent years have seen a new development in racial attitude research: Local community context has entered the spotlight as a potential influence on racial views. The race composition of the locality has been the most common focus; evidence from earlier decades suggests that white Americans are more likely to hold anti-black attitudes if they live in areas where the African-American population is relatively large...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337737/backstage-discourse-and-the-reproduction-of-white-masculinities
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew W Hughey
This article documents the shared patterns of private white male discourse. Drawing from comparative ethnographic research in a white nationalist and a white antiracist organization, I analyze how white men engage in private discourse to reproduce coherent and valorized understandings of white masculinity. These private speech acts reinforce prevailing narratives about race and gender, reproduce understandings of segregation and paternalism as natural, and rationalize the expression of overt racism. This analysis illustrates how antagonistic forms of “frontstage” white male activism may distract from white male identity management in the “backstage...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337736/crime-shame-reintegration-and-cross-national-homicide-a-partial-test-of-reintegrative-shaming-theory
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lonnie M Schaible, Lorine A Hughes
Reintegrative shaming theory (RST) argues that social aggregates characterized by high levels of communitarianism and nonstigmatizing shaming practices benefit from relatively low levels of crime. We combine aggregate measures from the World Values Survey with available macro-level data to test this hypothesis. Additionally, we examine the extent to which communitarianism and shaming mediate the effects of cultural and structural factors featured prominently in other macro-level theoretical frameworks (e.g...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21337735/watching-the-detectives-crime-programming-fear-of-crime-and-attitudes-about-the-criminal-justice-system
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa A Kort-Butler, Kelley J Sittner Hartshorn
Research demonstrates a complex relationship between television viewing and fear of crime. Social critics assert that media depictions perpetuate the dominant cultural ideology about crime and criminal justice. This article examines whether program type differentially affects fear of crime and perceptions of the crime rate. Next, it tests whether such programming differentially affects viewers' attitudes about the criminal justice system, and if these relationships are mediated by fear. Results indicated that fear mediated the relationship between viewing nonfictional shows and lack of support for the justice system...
2011: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24288417/gender-and-the-health-benefits-of-education
#39
Catherine E Ross, John Mirowsky
Does education improve health more for one sex than the other? We develop a theory of resource substitution which implies that education improves health more for women than men. Data from a 1995 survey of U.S. adults with follow-ups in 1998 and 2001 support the hypothesis. Physical impairment decreases more for women than for men as the level of education increases. The gender gap in impairment essentially disappears among people with a college degree. Latent growth SEM vectors also show that among the college educated, men's and women's life course patterns of physical impairment do not differ significantly...
2010: Sociological Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21921969/predictors-and-consequences-of-adolescents-norms-against-teenage-pregnancy
#40
Stefanie Mollborn
African American and Latino teenagers and communities are frequently assumed to have weaker norms against teenage pregnancy than whites. Despite their importance, adolescents' norms about teenage pregnancy have not been measured or their correlates and consequences documented. This study examines individual-level and contextual variation in adolescents' embarrassment at the prospect of a teenage pregnancy and its relationship with subsequent teenage pregnancy. Descriptive analyses find that norms vary by gender and individual- and neighborhood-level race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status (SES)...
2010: Sociological Quarterly
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