The Shape of Social Inequality: Stratification and Ethnicity in Comparative PerspectiveDavid Bills Elsevier, 2005. 8. 24. - 506페이지 This volume brings together former students, colleagues, and others influenced by the sociological scholarship of Archibald O. Haller to celebrate Haller's many contributions to theory and research on social stratification and mobility. All of the chapters respond to Haller's programmatic agenda for stratification research: "A full program aimed at understanding stratification requires: first, that we know what stratification structures consist of and how they may vary; second, that we identify the individual and collective consequences of the different states and rates of change of such structures; and third, seeing that some degree of stratification seems to be present everywhere, that we identify the factors that make stratification structures change." The contributors to this Festschrift address such topics as the changing nature of stratification regimes, the enduring significance of class analysis, the stratifying dimensions of race, ethnicity, and gender, and the interplay between educational systems and labor market outcomes. Many of the chapters adopt an explicitly cross-societal comparative perspective on processes and consequences of social stratification. The volume offers both conceptually and empirically important new analyses of the shape of social stratification. |
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66개의 결과 중 6 - 10개
15 페이지
... sample size, halve the number of models to be presented, and nonetheless allow for sex-specific distributions of responses and occupations (i.e. occupational segregation). The second type of data smoothing is necessary because the EG ...
... sample size, halve the number of models to be presented, and nonetheless allow for sex-specific distributions of responses and occupations (i.e. occupational segregation). The second type of data smoothing is necessary because the EG ...
21 페이지
... sample sizes are larger, and the big-class model for all GSS outcomes, where sample sizes are smaller. As we have discussed elsewhere (Weeden & Grusky, forthcoming), the BIC results differ across surveys not because CPS outcomes are ...
... sample sizes are larger, and the big-class model for all GSS outcomes, where sample sizes are smaller. As we have discussed elsewhere (Weeden & Grusky, forthcoming), the BIC results differ across surveys not because CPS outcomes are ...
32 페이지
... samples are further restricted to households in months 1–4 of the sampling rotation, thereby preventing a household from contributing observations in successive years. 4. Although we would have liked to assess Wright's influential neo ...
... samples are further restricted to households in months 1–4 of the sampling rotation, thereby preventing a household from contributing observations in successive years. 4. Although we would have liked to assess Wright's influential neo ...
46 페이지
... Sample sizes reflect the addition of 0.1 to zero cells. See Appendix A for variable definitions. aFor these outcomes, the big-class model is preferred to the hybrid model, but the saturated model is preferred to both. Table C.2 ...
... Sample sizes reflect the addition of 0.1 to zero cells. See Appendix A for variable definitions. aFor these outcomes, the big-class model is preferred to the hybrid model, but the saturated model is preferred to both. Table C.2 ...
49 페이지
... (7)). Farmers and farm laborers are single-occupation classes and hence are excluded from the table. Sample sizes reflect the addition of 0.1 to zero cells. § Table C.3. Internal Homogeneity in EG Classes, All Outcomes. Domain.
... (7)). Farmers and farm laborers are single-occupation classes and hence are excluded from the table. Sample sizes reflect the addition of 0.1 to zero cells. § Table C.3. Internal Homogeneity in EG Classes, All Outcomes. Domain.
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achievement gap adolescent girls analysis areas Asian attitudes Australia behavior big classes boys Brazil Brazilian agriculture caste Census Central-East Europe changes co-ethnic Cohort communities compared cultural deindustrialization demographic differences economic educational attainment educational stratification effect elite employment estimates Evans experience Family Farmer farm Father’s education Father’s occupation Gender Gini Gini coefficient green revolution groups Haller health status higher Hispanic human capital hypothesis immigrants income increase India industrial inequality interaction Intermediary Consumption Rate jatis Kelley labor force labor market land concentration language Large Farmer levels measures Migration Mother’s Mulatto nations occupational status outcomes parents pattern petty bourgeoisie Pittsburgh PNAD population production racial region regression reported Rural Sociology sample sector significant skills social class social stratification society socioeconomic statistical status allocation status attainment stereotype threat structure survey Table theory underclass variables village India Woelfel women York
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223 페이지 - The village communities are little republics, having nearly everything they want within themselves, and almost independent of any foreign relations. They seem to last where nothing else lasts.
122 페이지 - Power" (Macht) is the probability that one actor within a social relationship will be in a position to carry out his own will despite resistance, regardless of the basis on which this probability rests.
223 페이지 - This union of the village communities, each one forming a separate little state in itself, has, I conceive, contributed more than any other cause to the preservation of the people of India, through all the revolutions and changes which they have suffered, and is in a high degree conducive to their happiness, and to the enjoyment of a great portion of freedom and independence.
221 페이지 - Dumont (1970, p. 21, emphasis in original): . . . caste system divides the whole society into a large number of hereditary groups, distinguished from one another and connected together by three characteristics...
39 페이지 - Do you approve or disapprove of a married woman earning money in business or industry if she has a husband capable of supporting her?
39 페이지 - In general, do you think the courts in this area deal too harshly or not harshly enough with criminals?
38 페이지 - If you were to get enough money to live as comfortably as you would like for the rest of your life, would you continue to work or would you stop working?
39 페이지 - If you had to choose, which thing on this list would you pick as the most important for a child to learn to prepare him or her for life?
232 페이지 - Briefly, the older picture . . . described a society in which religious values and ideas were the sole determinants of attitudes toward, and chances for, social mobility; in which little if any such mobility actually occurred; in which there were no discrepancies or incongruities between an individual's position in the "caste...
331 페이지 - Next, what do you think people in these jobs ought to be paid - how much do you think they should earn each year...