Sociology

Höfundur John E. Farley; Michael W. Flota

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781138694699

Útgáfa 7

Útgáfuár 2018

14.590 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Photographs
  • List of Tables
  • List of Boxes
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • Part I Introduction
  • Chapter 1 Sociology: The Discipline
  • What Is Sociology?
  • Characteristics of Sociology
  • Sociology and Common Sense
  • Sociology as a Science
  • Science as a Way of Thinking
  • The Norms of Science
  • Sociology as a Social Science
  • Can Human Behavior Be Studied Scientifically?
  • An Analogy: Meteorology
  • Complications in the Study of Human Behavior
  • The Sociological Imagination
  • Sociology and the Other Social Sciences
  • Sociology
  • The Other Social Sciences
  • The Emergence and Development of Sociology
  • The Nineteenth Century
  • Early Sociologists
  • The Development of Sociology in the United States
  • The Chicago School
  • Symbolic-Interactionism
  • 1940–1960: A Turn from Activism
  • The 1960s: Return to Activism
  • The 1970s into the New Millennium: Diversity in Sociological Perspectives
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • How Sociology Can Be Used to Solve Real-Life Problems
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 2 How Sociology Is Done
  • Social Theory and Research
  • Cause and Effect
  • Theory and Values
  • Theories Versus Values: Why Does It Matter?
  • The Relationship Between Theory and Research
  • Using and Measuring Variables
  • Independent Variables
  • Dependent Variables
  • Operational Definitions
  • Validity and Reliability
  • Correlation
  • Control Variables
  • Key Research Methods in Sociology
  • Quantitative and Qualitative Methods
  • Experiments
  • Experimental and Control Groups
  • Field Experiments
  • Survey Research
  • Questionnaires
  • Telephone Interviews
  • Personal Interviews
  • Survey Questions
  • Sampling
  • Field Observation
  • Field Observation and Theory Generation
  • Participant Observation
  • Unobtrusive Observation
  • Use of Existing Data Sources
  • Data Archives
  • The U.S. Census
  • Content Analysis
  • Reading Tables
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Part II Society and Human Interaction
  • Chapter 3 Perspectives on Society and Interaction
  • Perspectives in Sociology
  • Macrosociology and Microsociology
  • Macrosociology I: The Functionalist Perspective
  • The Functionalist Perspective Defined
  • Key Principles of the Functionalist Perspective
  • Consensus and Cooperation
  • Functions and Dysfunctions
  • Macrosociology II: The Conflict Perspective
  • The Conflict Perspective Defined
  • Macrosociological Perspectives: Is Synthesis Possible?
  • Functional for Whom? Another Look
  • Simultaneous Forces for Cooperation and Conflict
  • Macrosociological Perspectives: A Final Note
  • Microsociology: The Symbolic-Interactionist Perspective
  • The Interactionist Perspective Defined
  • Interpreting Situations and Messages
  • The Social Construction of Reality
  • Social Roles
  • Sending Messages: The Presentation of Self
  • Micro- and Macrosociology: Is Synthesis Possible?
  • Simultaneous Effects of Function, Conflict, and Interaction
  • Exchange Theory
  • Using All Three Perspectives: An Example
  • The Three Perspectives and This Book
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 4 Culture and Social Structure
  • Society, Culture, and Social Structure
  • What Is Culture?
  • Shared Truths: Knowledge, Language, and Beliefs
  • Shared Values
  • Ideology
  • Social Norms
  • What Is Social Structure?
  • Social Status
  • Roles
  • Division of Labor
  • Stratification
  • Relationships Between Roles and Statuses
  • Institutions
  • Perspectives on Culture and Social Structure
  • The Functionalist Perspective: Adaptation of Culture and Social Structure to the Environment
  • Cultural and Structural Variation: Do Cultural or Structural Universals Exist?
  • Universal Social Tasks
  • The Conflict Perspective and Culture
  • Incompatibilities Between Culture and Social Structure
  • Sewell’s Duality of Structure Theory
  • Culture Against Structure: The Functionalist Perspective
  • Subcultures in Mass Society
  • Culture Against Structure: The Conflict Perspective
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Multiculturalism: A Pathway to Cooperation in a Diverse Society?
  • American Culture
  • Core American Values and Beliefs
  • Ideal Versus Real Culture
  • Recent Changes in American Values and Beliefs
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 5 Socialization
  • Becoming “Human” Through Socialization
  • Learning About Norms and Social Roles
  • Theories of Socialization and Development
  • Nature Versus Nurture
  • Interactionist Theories of Socialization: Mead and Cooley
  • Theories About Social Expectations and Personal Dilemmas: Freud and Erikson
  • Cognitive Development Theories of Socialization: Piaget and Kohlberg
  • Overview of Theories of Socialization
  • Agents of Socialization
  • The Family
  • Schools
  • Religion
  • Peers
  • The Media
  • How Socialization Works
  • Conflicting Messages
  • Socialization in Adulthood
  • Life Cycle Roles
  • Role Change, Adult Socialization, and Stress
  • Resocialization in Total Institutions
  • Functionalist and Conflict Perspectives on Socialization
  • The Functionalist Perspective
  • The Conflict Perspective
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Part III Social Structure and Inequality
  • Chapter 6 Stratification: Structured Social Inequality
  • What Is Stratification?
  • Dimensions of Stratification
  • The Economic Dimension
  • The Political Dimension
  • The Social Prestige Dimension
  • The Distribution of Wealth and Income in the United States
  • The Distribution of Income
  • The Distribution of Wealth
  • Socioeconomic Mobility
  • Caste Systems
  • Estate or Feudal Systems
  • Class Systems
  • International Comparisons of Mobility
  • Social Class in U.S. Society
  • The Marxian Definition of Social Class
  • The Composite Definition of Social Class
  • Contradictory Class Locations
  • The Subjective Definition of Social Class
  • Occupational Prestige
  • Class Consciousness in the United States
  • Poverty in the United States
  • How Poverty Is Defined
  • Poverty in America: The Current Situation
  • Who Is Poor?
  • Causes of Poverty
  • Poor People Themselves? Work, Family Structure, and Poverty
  • Unemployment
  • Low Wages
  • Government Policy
  • Consequences of Poverty
  • Functionalist and Conflict Perspectives on Stratification
  • The Functionalist View: Davis and Moore
  • The Conflict View
  • Is Stratification Really Functional?
  • Synthesis
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 7 Race and Ethnic Relations
  • Racial and Ethnic Groups: What Is the Difference?
  • Majority and Minority Groups
  • Racism
  • Ideological Racism
  • Racial and Ethnic Prejudice
  • Individual Discrimination
  • Institutional Discrimination
  • Theories About the Causes of Racial and Ethnic Inequality
  • Social-Psychological Theories of Race Relations
  • The Relationship Between Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Social-Structural Theories of Race Relations
  • Racial and Ethnic Relations: An International Perspective
  • Ethnic Inequality and Conflict: How Universal?
  • Racial Caste in South Africa and the United States
  • Racial Assimilation in Latin America
  • Racial and Ethnic Groups in the United States
  • Minority Groups: African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Native Americans
  • Economic Exploitation and the Origins of Intergroup Inequality
  • Segregation and Attacks on Culture
  • The Status of Minority Groups Today
  • Intermediate Status Groups: Asian Americans, Jewish and Muslim Americans, and “White Ethnics”
  • The Majority Group
  • Current Issues in U.S. Race Relations
  • The Significance of Race Versus Class
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • The Affirmative Action Debate
  • Is Affirmative Action Reverse Discrimination?
  • Is the System Fair Without Affirmative Action?
  • How Effective Is Affirmative Action?
  • The Legal and Political Status of Affirmative Action
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 8 Sex, Gender, and Society
  • What Are Sex and Gender Roles?
  • Sex and Gender Roles
  • Sexism
  • Traditional American Gender Roles
  • Cultural Variation in Gender Roles
  • Gender-Role Socialization: An Interactionist Analysis
  • How Gender Roles Develop
  • Teaching Gender Roles in the Home
  • Teaching Gender Roles in the School
  • Teaching Gender Roles on Television
  • How Peers Teach Gender Roles
  • How Gender Roles Are Learned
  • The Looking-Glass Self and Gender-Role Socialization
  • Modeling and Gender-Role Socialization
  • Structured Sexual Inequality: Power
  • Men, Women, and Positions of Authority
  • Women in Politics
  • Women in the Business World
  • Men, Women, and Power in the Home
  • “Doing” Gender: The Social Construction of Gender and Sex
  • Structured Sexual Inequality: Income
  • Some Possible Reasons for Women’s Low Wages
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Understanding and Preventing Sexual Harassment
  • Functionalist and Conflict Perspectives on Gender Roles
  • The Origins of Gender Inequality
  • The Functionalist Perspective
  • The Conflict Perspective
  • Feminism: A Challenge to Male Power
  • Feminist Social Theory
  • Ecofeminism
  • How Are Gender Roles Changing in America?
  • Sexual Double Standard
  • Employment Discrimination
  • Sexual Assault
  • Limitations of Change
  • Public Opinion and Future Prospects for Gender Equality
  • Intersexuality, Sexual Orientation, and the Politics of Being “Different”
  • Sexual Orientation
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 9 Groups, Organizations, and the Workplace
  • Groups and Organizations: What Is the Difference?
  • Group Characteristics and Dynamics
  • Group Size
  • Primary and Secondary Groups
  • Conformity Within Groups
  • Outside Threats and Group Cohesion
  • Dysfunctional Group Processes
  • Organizations
  • Why Study Organizations?
  • Characteristics of Organizations
  • Social Networks and the Strength of Weak Ties
  • Oligarchy Versus Democracy
  • Michels’s Iron Law of Oligarchy
  • Oligarchy: Iron Law or Just a Tendency?
  • Leadership in Groups and Organizations
  • Instrumental and Expressive Leadership
  • Characteristics of Leaders
  • Bureaucracy
  • Why Do Bureaucracies Develop?
  • Bureaucracy and Democracy
  • Karl Marx on Bureaucracy
  • The Pervasiveness of Bureaucracy
  • Evaluating Bureaucracy
  • Dysfunctions of Bureaucracy
  • An Interactionist View of Bureaucracy
  • Informal Structure
  • Negotiated Order
  • Globalization and New Trends in Work Organization
  • Globalization and Work
  • Japanese Work Organization
  • Scandinavian Workplace Innovations
  • Workplace Change in the United States
  • Alternatives to Bureaucracy
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 10 Deviance, Crime, and Social Control
  • How Sociologists View Deviance
  • The Sociology of Rule Making
  • Social Control
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Does Capital Punishment Deter Murder?
  • Crime
  • Street Crime
  • Victimless Crime
  • Legalization or Decriminalization of Drugs: Pros and Cons
  • White-Collar and Corporate Crime
  • Organized Crime
  • Political Crime
  • Characteristics of Criminals
  • Crime Statistics: A Closer Look
  • Race, Class, and Crime Statistics
  • Explaining Deviant Behavior
  • Kinds of People: Biological and Psychological Theories of Deviant Behavior
  • Societal Explanations of Deviant Behavior
  • Anomie and Deviant Behavior
  • Subcultural Explanations of Deviance
  • Labeling Tradition
  • Functionalist and Conflict Perspectives on Deviance
  • The Functionalist View: Durkheim
  • The Dysfunctions of Deviance: Parsons
  • The Conflict View
  • Feminist Criminology
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Part IV Social Institutions
  • Chapter 11 Economy and Society
  • Economic Systems
  • Sectors of the Economy
  • Economic Change and Social Change
  • Economic Development and Society
  • Hunting-and-Gathering Economies
  • Agricultural Economies
  • Industrial Economies
  • The Shift to Postindustrial Economies
  • Effects on the Labor Force and Stratification
  • The Rise of Professions
  • The Role of Science and Education
  • Postmodernism: A Challenge to Science and Technology
  • Modern Economic Systems
  • Capitalism
  • Socialism
  • Karl Marx and Communism
  • Mixed Economies
  • Social Consequences of Modern Economic Systems
  • Does Capitalism Promote Greed?
  • Socialism, Capitalism, the Market, and Productivity
  • Is Socialism Dead?
  • The Changing Scale of Modern Economies
  • Concentration in Corporate Capitalism
  • Consequences of Concentration
  • Multinational Corporations
  • Globalization and Its Consequences
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Free Trade or Protectionism?
  • Unemployment and the Economic Cycle
  • Financial Systems
  • Voice or Exit
  • Financial Crises
  • Derivatives: Financial Insurance or Weapons of Mass Destruction?
  • Karl Polanyi and the New Economic Sociology
  • The Sociological Study of the Economy
  • Karl Polanyi Enters the Dance
  • The Embedded Economy and the Impossibility of the Self-Regulating Market
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 12 Politics, Power, and Society
  • Power in Modern Societies
  • Legitimate Power and Authority
  • Other Sources of Power
  • Wealth, Income, and Power
  • Who Has Power in America Today?
  • Measuring Power
  • The Distribution of Power in the United States
  • Three Key Interest Group Coalitions
  • Who Governs?
  • Who Benefits?
  • Who Wins?
  • Overview
  • The State
  • Types of Systems
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Welfare Reform: An Effective Tool Against Poverty?
  • Welfare Around the World
  • Liberal Welfare States: The United States, Canada, the United Kingdom
  • Corporatist-Statist Welfare States
  • Social Democratic Welfare States
  • Evaluating the Welfare States
  • Political Ideology
  • Political Parties and Special Interest Groups
  • Lobbyists and Special Interest Groups
  • Voting Patterns of the Major Social Groups
  • The Apathetic Voter
  • The Politics of Development in the Third World
  • Perspectives on Uneven Development in the Third World
  • Modernization Theories
  • Dependency Theories
  • World-System Theory
  • Terrorism: A Challenge to Government
  • Governments and Terrorism
  • Terrorism in the Modern World
  • Who Is Vulnerable to Insurgent Terrorism?
  • Theories About the Causes of Terrorism
  • Can Terrorism Be Combated?
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 13 Marriages and Families
  • Family and Marriage Defined
  • Extended and Nuclear Families
  • Family Memberships
  • Marriage Patterns
  • Mate Selection
  • Romantic Love and Mate Selection
  • Patterns Within Marriages
  • Power and Authority in Marriages
  • Residency Patterns
  • Inheritance and Descent Patterns
  • Functions of Families
  • Changing Functions
  • The Family as a Regulator of Sexual Behavior
  • A Conflict Analysis of the Family
  • Role Inequality Within the Family
  • Violence in the Family and in Courtship
  • The Family in the Larger Social Structure
  • Changing Patterns of Marriages and Families
  • Changing Roles Within Marriages
  • Delayed Marriage and Permanent Singlehood
  • Cohabitation
  • Gay and Lesbian Couples
  • Fewer Children, No Children
  • Marital Disruption and Divorce
  • Divorce in the United States
  • Causes of Divorce
  • Changing Divorce Laws
  • PUTTING SOCIOLOGY TO WORK
  • Should Couples Stay Together “for the Sake of the Kids”?
  • Remarriage
  • Single-Parent Families
  • Race, Poverty, and the One-Parent Family
  • The Future of Marriages and Families
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Part V Social Change
  • Chapter 14 Urban Society: City Life and Collective Behavior
  • The Rise of Cities Throughout the World
  • Technology, Industrialization, and Urbanization
  • Social Change and Urbanization
  • The Demographic Transition and Urbanization
  • Urbanization in the United States
  • Economics of Urban Growth
  • Functional Specialization
  • Urban Hierarchy
  • Urbanization in the Third World
  • Urban Life
  • Differences Between Rural and Urban Life
  • Wirth on Urban Life
  • Decline of Community: Myth or Reality?
  • Urban Life and “Getting Involved”
  • Cities and Social Conflict
  • Collective Behavior
  • Causes of Collective Behavior
  • Types of Collective Behavior
  • Collective Behavior in Crowds
  • Types of Crowd Behavior
  • Mass Behavior
  • Types of Mass Behavior
  • Fashions and Fads
  • The Structure of the City
  • Human Ecology
  • Urban Social Segregation
  • The Changing City in Postindustrial America
  • The Rise of the Suburbs
  • Causes of Suburbanization
  • Life in the Suburbs
  • The Crisis of the Central Cities
  • Population Decline
  • The Urban Underclass
  • The Urban Fiscal Crisis
  • Uneven Development Among American Cities
  • Different Processes or Different Stages?
  • The Conflict Theory of Uneven Development
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Chapter 15 Social Movements and Change
  • Social Movements
  • Types of Social Movements
  • The Causes of Social Movements
  • Necessary Conditions for Social Movements
  • Social Change
  • What Is Social Change?
  • Theories of Social Change
  • Equilibrium (Functionalist) Versus Conflict Theories of Social Change
  • Evolutionary Versus Cyclical Changes
  • Modernization: Escalating Social Change
  • Consequences of Rapid Social Change
  • New Directions in the Study of Social Change
  • Summary
  • Key Terms
  • Exercises
  • Glossary
  • Index
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