Sociology, Global Edition

Höfundur John J. Macionis

Útgefandi Pearson International Content

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781292161471

Útgáfa 16

Höfundarréttur 2017

4.290 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Sociology
  • Copyright Page
  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • Boxes
  • Maps
  • Preface
  • About the Author
  • Part I: The Foundations of Sociology
  • Chapter 1: The Sociological Perspective
  • The Power of Society to guide our choices in marriage partners
  • The Sociological Perspective
  • 1.1: Explain how the sociological perspective differs from common sense.
  • Seeing the General in the Particular
  • Seeing the Strange in the Familiar
  • Seeing Society in Our Everyday Lives
  • Seeing Sociologically: Marginality and Crisis
  • The Importance of a Global Perspective
  • 1.2: State several reasons that a global perspective is important in today’s world.
  • Applying the Sociological Perspective
  • 1.3: Identify the advantages of sociological thinking for developing public policy, for encouraging
  • Sociology and Public Policy
  • Sociology and Personal Growth
  • Careers: The “Sociology Advantage”
  • The Origins of Sociology
  • 1.4: Link the origins of sociology to historical social changes.
  • Social Change and Sociology
  • Science and Sociology
  • Sociological Theory
  • 1.5: Summarize sociology’s major theoretical approaches.
  • The Structural-Functional Approach
  • The Social-Conflict Approach
  • Feminism and Gender-Conflict Theory
  • Race-Conflict Theory
  • The Symbolic-Interaction Approach
  • Applying the Approaches: The Sociology of Sports
  • 1.6: Apply sociology’s major theoretical approaches to the topic of sports.
  • The Functions of Sports
  • Sports and Conflict
  • Sports as Interaction
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 2: Sociological Investigation
  • The Power of Society to influence our life chances
  • Basics of Sociological Investigation
  • 2.1: Explain how scientific evidence often challenges common sense.
  • Science as One Type of Truth
  • Common Sense versus Scientific Evidence
  • Three Ways to Do Sociology
  • 2.2: Describe sociology’s three research orientations.
  • Positivist Sociology
  • Interpretive Sociology
  • Critical Sociology
  • Research Orientations and Theory
  • Issues Affecting Sociological Research
  • 2.3: Identify the importance of gender and ethics in sociological research.
  • Gender
  • Research Ethics
  • Research Methods
  • 2.4: Explain why a researcher might choose each of sociology’s research methods.
  • Testing a Hypothesis: The Experiment
  • Asking Questions: Survey Research
  • In the Field: Participant Observation
  • Using Available Data: Existing Sources
  • Research Methods and Theory
  • Putting It All Together: Ten Steps in Sociological Investigation
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Part II: The Foundations of Society
  • Chapter 3: Culture
  • The Power of Society to guide our attitudes on social issues such as abortion
  • What Is Culture?
  • 3.1: Explain the development of culture as a human strategy for survival.
  • Culture and Human Intelligence
  • Culture, Nation, and Society
  • How Many Cultures?
  • The Elements of Culture
  • 3.2: Identify common elements of culture.
  • Symbols
  • Language
  • Values and Beliefs
  • Norms
  • Ideal and Real Culture
  • Material Culture and Technology
  • New Information Technology and Culture
  • Cultural Diversity: Many Ways of Life in One World
  • 3.3: Discuss dimensions of cultural difference and cultural change.
  • High Culture and Popular Culture
  • Subculture
  • Multiculturalism
  • Counterculture
  • Cultural Change
  • Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism
  • A Global Culture?
  • Theories of Culture
  • 3.4: Apply sociology’s macro-level theories to gain greater understanding of culture.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: The Functions of Culture
  • Social-Conflict Theory: Inequality and Culture
  • Feminist Theory: Gender and Culture
  • Sociobiology: Evolution and Culture
  • Culture and Human Freedom
  • 3.5: Critique culture as limiting or expanding human freedom.
  • Culture as Constraint
  • Culture as Freedom
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 4: Society
  • The Power of Society to shape access to the Internet
  • Gerhard Lenski: Society and Technology
  • 4.1: Describe how technological development has shaped the history of human societies.
  • Hunting and Gathering Societies
  • Horticultural and Pastoral Societies
  • Agrarian Societies
  • Industrial Societies
  • Postindustrial Societies
  • The Limits of Technology
  • Karl Marx: Society and Conflict
  • 4.2: Analyze the importance of class conflict to the historical development of human societies.
  • Society and Production
  • Conflict and History
  • Capitalism and Class Conflict
  • Capitalism and Alienation
  • Revolution
  • Max Weber: The Rationalization of Society
  • 4.3: Demonstrate the importance of ideas to the development of human societies.
  • Two Worldviews: Tradition and Rationality
  • Is Capitalism Rational?
  • Weber’s Great Thesis: Protestantism and Capitalism
  • Rational Social Organization
  • Emile Durkheim: Society and Function
  • 4.4: Contrast the social bonds typical of traditional and modern societies.
  • Structure: Society beyond Ourselves
  • Function: Society as System
  • Personality: Society in Ourselves
  • Modernity and Anomie
  • Evolving Societies: The Division of Labor
  • Critical Review: Four Visions of Society
  • 4.5: Summarize the contributions of Lenski, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim to our understanding of social
  • What Holds Societies Together?
  • How Have Societies Changed?
  • Why Do Societies Change?
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 5: Socialization
  • The Power of Society to shape how much television we watch
  • Social Experience: The Key to Our Humanity
  • 5.1: Describe how social interaction is the foundation of personality.
  • Human Development: Nature and Nurture
  • Social Isolation
  • Understanding Socialization
  • 5.2: Explain six major theories of socialization.
  • Sigmund Freud’s Elements of Personality
  • Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
  • Lawrence Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development
  • Carol Gilligan’s Theory of Gender and Moral Development
  • George Herbert Mead’s Theory of the Social Self
  • Erik H. Erikson’s Eight Stages of Development
  • Agents of Socialization
  • 5.3: Analyze how the family, school, peer groups, and the mass media guide the socialization process
  • The Family
  • The School
  • The Peer Group
  • The Mass Media
  • Socialization and the Life Course
  • 5.4: Discuss how our society organizes human experience into distinctive stages of life.
  • Childhood
  • Adolescence
  • Adulthood
  • Old Age
  • Death and Dying
  • The Life Course: Patterns and Variations
  • Resocialization: Total Institutions
  • 5.5: Characterize the operation of total institutions.
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 6: Social Interaction in Everyday Life
  • The Power of Society to guide the way we do social networking
  • Social Structure: A Guide to Everyday Living
  • 6.1: Explain how social structure helps us to make sense of everyday situations.
  • Status
  • 6.2: State the importance of status to social organization.
  • Status Set
  • Ascribed and Achieved Status
  • Master Status
  • Role
  • 6.3: State the importance of role to social organization.
  • Role Set
  • Role Conflict and Role Strain
  • Role Exit
  • The Social Construction of Reality
  • 6.4: Describe how we socially construct reality.
  • The Thomas Theorem
  • Ethnomethodology
  • Reality Building: Class and Culture
  • The Increasing Importance of Social Media
  • Dramaturgical Analysis: The “Presentation of Self”
  • 6.5: Apply Goffman’s analysis to several familiar situations.
  • Performances
  • Nonverbal Communication
  • Gender and Performances
  • Idealization
  • Embarrassment and Tact
  • Interaction in Everyday Life: Three Applications
  • 6.6: Construct a sociological analysis of three aspects of everyday life: emotions, language, and hu
  • Emotions: The Social Construction of Feeling
  • Language: The Social Construction of Gender
  • Reality Play: The Social Construction of Humor
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 7: Groups and Organizations
  • The Power of Society to link people into groups
  • Social Groups
  • 7.1: Explain the importance of various types of groups to social life.
  • Primary and Secondary Groups
  • Group Leadership
  • Group Conformity
  • Reference Groups
  • In-Groups and Out-Groups
  • Group Size
  • Social Diversity: Race, Class, and Gender
  • Networks
  • Social Media and Networking
  • Formal Organizations
  • 7.2: Describe the operation of large, formal organizations.
  • Types of Formal Organizations
  • Origins of Formal Organizations
  • Characteristics of Bureaucracy
  • Organizational Environment
  • The Informal Side of Bureaucracy
  • Problems of Bureaucracy
  • Oligarchy
  • The Evolution of Formal Organizations
  • 7.3: Summarize the changes to formal organizations over the course of the last century.
  • Scientific Management
  • The First Challenge: Race and Gender
  • The Second Challenge: The Japanese Work Organization
  • The Third Challenge: The Changing Nature of Work
  • The “McDonaldization” of Society
  • The Future of Organizations: Opposing Trends
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 8: Sexuality and Society
  • The Power of Society to shape our attitudes on social issues involving sexuality
  • Understanding Sexuality
  • 8.1: Describe how sexuality is both a biological and a cultural issue.
  • Sex: A Biological Issue
  • Sex and the Body
  • Sex: A Cultural Issue
  • The Incest Taboo
  • Sexual Attitudes in the United States
  • 8.2: Explain changes in sexual attitudes in the United States.
  • The Sexual Revolution
  • The Sexual Counterrevolution
  • Premarital Sex
  • Sex between Adults
  • Extramarital Sex
  • Sex over the Life Course
  • Sexual Orientation
  • 8.3: Analyze factors that shape sexual orientation.
  • What Gives Us a Sexual Orientation?
  • How Many Gay People Are There?
  • The Gay Rights Movement
  • Transgender
  • Sexual Issues and Controversies
  • 8.4: Discuss several current controversies involving sexuality.
  • Teen Pregnancy
  • Pornography
  • Prostitution
  • Sexual Violence: Rape and Date Rape
  • Theories of Sexuality
  • 8.5: Apply sociology’s major theories to the topic of sexuality.
  • Structural-Functional Theory
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory
  • Social-Conflict and Feminist Theories
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 9: Deviance
  • The Power of Society to affect the odds of being incarcerated for using drugs
  • What Is Deviance?
  • 9.1: Explain how sociology addresses limitations of a biological or psychological approach to devian
  • Social Control
  • The Biological Context
  • Personality Factors
  • The Social Foundations of Deviance
  • Structural-Functional Theories: The Functions of Deviance
  • 9.2: Apply structural-functional theories to the topic of deviance.
  • Durkheim’s Basic Insight
  • Merton’s Strain Theory
  • Deviant Subcultures
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theories: Defining Deviance
  • 9.3: Apply symbolic-interaction theories to the topic of deviance.
  • Labeling Theory
  • The Medicalization of Deviance
  • The Difference Labels Make
  • Sutherland’s Differential Association Theory
  • Hirschi’s Control Theory
  • Theories of Class, Race, and Gender: Deviance and Inequality
  • 9.4: Apply social-conflict theories to the topic of deviance.
  • Deviance and Power
  • Deviance and Capitalism
  • White-Collar Crime
  • Corporate Crime
  • Organized Crime
  • Race-Conflict Theory: Hate Crimes
  • Feminist Theory: Deviance and Gender
  • Crime
  • 9.5: Identify patterns of crime in the United States and around the world.
  • Types of Crime
  • Criminal Statistics
  • The Street Criminal: A Profile
  • Crime in Global Perspective
  • The U.S. Criminal Justice System
  • 9.6: Analyze the operation of the criminal justice system.
  • Due Process
  • Police
  • Courts
  • Punishment
  • The Death Penalty
  • Community-Based Corrections
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Part III: Social Inequality
  • Chapter 10: Social Stratification
  • The Power of Society to affect life expectancy
  • What Is Social Stratification?
  • 10.1: Identify four principles that underlie social stratification.
  • Caste and Class Systems
  • 10.2: Apply the concepts of caste, class, and meritocracy to societies around the world.
  • The Caste System
  • The Class System
  • Caste and Class: The United Kingdom
  • Another Example: Japan
  • Classless Societies? The Former Soviet Union
  • China: Emerging Social Classes
  • Ideology: Supporting Stratification
  • 10.3: Explain how cultural beliefs justify social inequality.
  • Plato and Marx on Ideology
  • Historical Patterns of Ideology
  • Theories of Social Inequality
  • 10.4: Apply sociology’s major theories to the topic of social inequality.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: The Davis-Moore Thesis
  • Social-Conflict Theories: Karl Marx and Max Weber
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory: Stratification in Everyday Life
  • Social Stratification: Facts and Values
  • Social Stratification and Technology: A Global Perspective
  • 10.5: Analyze the link between a society’s technology and its social stratification.
  • Hunting and Gathering Societies
  • Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agrarian Societies
  • Industrial Societies
  • The Kuznets Curve
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 11: Social Class in the United States
  • The Power of Society to shape our changes of living in poverty
  • Dimensions of Social Inequality
  • 11.1: Describe the distribution of income and wealth in the United States.
  • Income
  • Wealth
  • Power
  • Occupational Prestige
  • Schooling
  • U.S. Stratification: Merit and Caste
  • 11.2: Explain how someone’s position at birth affects social standing later in life.
  • Ancestry
  • Race and Ethnicity
  • Gender
  • Social Classes in the United States
  • 11.3: Describe the various social class positions in U.S. society.
  • The Upper Class
  • The Middle Class
  • The Working Class
  • The Lower Class
  • The Difference Class Makes
  • 11.4: Analyze how social class position affects health, values, politics, and family life.
  • Health
  • Values and Attitudes
  • Politics
  • Family and Gender
  • Social Mobility
  • 11.5: Assess the extent of social mobility in the United States.
  • Research on Mobility
  • Mobility by Income Level
  • Mobility: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender
  • Mobility and Marriage
  • The American Dream: Still a Reality?
  • The Global Economy and the U.S. Class Structure
  • Poverty and the Trend Toward Increasing Inequality
  • 11.6: Discuss patterns of poverty and increasing economic inequality in the United States.
  • The Extent of Poverty
  • Who Are the Poor?
  • Explaining Poverty
  • The Working Poor
  • Homelessness
  • The Trend toward Increasing Inequality
  • Are the Very Rich Worth the Money?
  • Can the Rest of Us Get Ahead?
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 12: Global Stratification
  • The Power of Society to determine a child’s chance of survival to age five
  • Global Stratification: An Overview
  • 12.1: Describe the division of the world into high-, middle-, and low-income countries.
  • A Word about Terminology
  • High-Income Countries
  • Middle-Income Countries
  • Low-Income Countries
  • Global Wealth and Poverty
  • 12.2: Discuss patterns and explanations of poverty around the world.
  • The Severity of Poverty
  • The Extent of Poverty
  • Poverty and Children
  • Poverty and Women
  • Slavery
  • Explanations of Global Poverty
  • Theories of Global Stratification
  • 12.3: Apply sociological theories to the topic of global inequality.
  • Modernization Theory
  • Dependency Theory
  • The Future of Global Stratification
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 13: Gender Stratification
  • The Power of Society to guide our life choices
  • Gender and Inequality
  • 13.1: Describe the ways in which society creates gender stratification.
  • Male-Female Differences
  • Gender in Global Perspective
  • Patriarchy and Sexism
  • Gender and Socialization
  • 13.2: Explain the importance of gender to socialization.
  • Gender and the Family
  • Gender and the Peer Group
  • Gender and Schooling
  • Gender and the Mass Media
  • Gender and Social Stratification
  • 13.3: Analyze the extent of gender inequality in various social institutions.
  • Working Women and Men
  • Gender and Unemployment
  • Gender, Income, and Wealth
  • Housework: Women’s “Second Shift”
  • Gender and Education
  • Gender and Politics
  • Gender and the Military
  • Are Women a Minority?
  • Violence against Women
  • Violence against Men
  • Sexual Harassment
  • Pornography
  • Theories of Gender
  • 13.4: Apply sociology’s major theories to gender stratification.
  • Structural-Functional Theory
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory
  • Social-Conflict Theory
  • Intersection Theory
  • Feminism
  • 13.5: Contrast liberal, radical, and socialist feminism.
  • Basic Feminist Ideas
  • Types of Feminism
  • Public Support for Feminism
  • Gender: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 14: Race and Ethnicity
  • The Power of Society to shape political attitudes
  • The Social Meaning of Race and Ethnicity
  • 14.1: Explain the social construction of race and ethnicity.
  • Race
  • Ethnicity
  • Minorities
  • Prejudice and Stereotypes
  • 14.2: Describe the extent and causes of prejudice.
  • Measuring Prejudice: The Social Distance Scale
  • Racism
  • Theories of Prejudice
  • Discrimination
  • 14.3: Distinguish discrimination from prejudice.
  • Institutional Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice and Discrimination: The Vicious Circle
  • Majority and Minority: Patterns of Interaction
  • 14.4: Identify examples of pluralism, assimilation, segregation, and genocide.
  • Pluralism
  • Assimilation
  • Segregation
  • Genocide
  • Race and Ethnicity in the United States
  • 14.5: Assess the social standing of racial and ethnic categories of U.S. society.
  • Native Americans
  • White Anglo-Saxon Protestants
  • African Americans
  • Asian Americans
  • Hispanic Americans/Latinos
  • Arab Americans
  • White Ethnic Americans
  • Race and Ethnicity: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 15: Aging and the Elderly
  • The Power of Society to shape caregiving for older people
  • The Graying of the United States
  • 15.1: Explain the increasing share of elderly people in modern societies.
  • Birth Rate: Going Down
  • Life Expectancy: Going Up
  • An Aging Society: Cultural Change
  • The “Young Old” and the “Old Old”
  • Growing Old: Biology and Culture
  • 15.2: Describe age stratification in global context.
  • Biological Changes
  • Psychological Changes
  • Aging and Culture
  • Age Stratification: A Global Survey
  • Transitions and Challenges of Aging
  • 15.3: Discuss problems related to aging.
  • Finding Meaning
  • Social Isolation
  • Retirement
  • Aging and Poverty
  • Caregiving
  • Ageism
  • The Elderly: A Minority?
  • Theories of Aging
  • 15.4: Apply sociology’s major theories to the topic of aging.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: Aging and Disengagement
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory: Aging and Activity
  • Social-Conflict and Feminist Theories: Aging and Inequality
  • Death and Dying
  • 15.5: Analyze changing attitudes about the end of life.
  • Historical Patterns of Death
  • The Modern Separation of Life and Death
  • Ethical Issues: Confronting Death
  • Bereavement
  • Aging: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Part IV: Social Institutions
  • Chapter 16: The Economy and Work
  • The Power of Society to shape our choices in jobs
  • The Economy: Historical Overview
  • 16.1: Summarize historical changes to the economy.
  • The Agricultural Revolution
  • The Industrial Revolution
  • The Information Revolution and Postindustrial Society
  • Sectors of the Economy
  • The Global Economy
  • Economic Systems: Paths to Justice
  • 16.2: Assess the operation of capitalist and socialist economies.
  • Capitalism
  • Socialism
  • Welfare Capitalism and State Capitalism
  • Relative Advantages of Capitalism and Socialism
  • Changes in Socialist and Capitalist Countries
  • Work in the Postindustrial U.S. Economy
  • 16.3: Analyze patterns of employment and unemployment in the United States.
  • The Decline of Agricultural Work
  • From Factory Work to Service Work
  • The Dual Labor Market
  • Labor Unions
  • Professions
  • Self-Employment
  • Unemployment and Underemployment
  • The “Jobless Recovery”
  • The Underground Economy
  • Workplace Diversity: Race and Gender
  • New Information Technology and Work
  • Corporations
  • 16.4: Discuss the importance of corporations to the U.S. economy.
  • Economic Concentration
  • Conglomerates and Corporate Linkages
  • Corporations: Are They Competitive?
  • Corporations and the Global Economy
  • The Economy: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 17: Politics and Government
  • The Power of Society to shape voting patterns
  • Power and Authority
  • 17.1: Distinguish traditional, rational-legal, and charismatic authority.
  • Traditional Authority
  • Rational-Legal Authority
  • Charismatic Authority
  • Politics in Global Perspective
  • 17.2: Compare monarchy and democracy as well as authoritarian and totalitarian political systems.
  • Monarchy
  • Democracy
  • Authoritarianism
  • Totalitarianism
  • A Global Political System?
  • Politics in the United States
  • 17.3: Analyze economic and social issues using the political spectrum.
  • U.S. Culture and the Rise of the Welfare State
  • The Political Spectrum
  • Special-Interest Groups and Campaign Spending
  • Voter Apathy
  • Should Convicted Criminals Vote?
  • Theories of Power in Society
  • 17.4: Apply the pluralist, power-elite, and Marxist models to the U.S. political system.
  • The Pluralist Model: The People Rule
  • The Power-Elite Model: A Few People Rule
  • The Marxist Model: The System Is Biased
  • Power beyond the Rules
  • 17.5: Describe causes of both revolution and terrorism.
  • Revolution
  • Terrorism
  • War and Peace
  • 17.6: Identify factors encouraging war or peace.
  • The Causes of War
  • Social Class, Gender, and the Military
  • Is Terrorism a New Kind of War?
  • The Costs and Causes of Militarism
  • Nuclear Weapons
  • Mass Media and War
  • Pursuing Peace
  • Politics: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 18: Families
  • The Power of Society to affect the odds that a marriage will end in divorce
  • Families: Basic Concepts and Global Variations
  • 18.1: Describe families and how they differ around the world.
  • Marriage Patterns
  • Residential Patterns
  • Patterns of Descent
  • Patterns of Authority
  • Theories of the Family
  • 18.2: Apply sociology’s major theories to family life.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: Functions of the Family
  • Social-Conflict and Feminist Theories: Inequality and the Family
  • Micro-Level Theories: Constructing Family Life
  • Stages of Family Life
  • 18.3: Analyze changes in the family over the life course.
  • Courtship
  • Settling In: Ideal and Real Marriage
  • Child Rearing
  • The Family in Later Life
  • U.S. Families: Class, Race, and Gender
  • 18.4: Explain how class, race, and gender shape family life.
  • Social Class
  • Ethnicity and Race
  • Gender
  • Transitions and Problems in Family Life
  • 18.5: Analyze the effects of divorce, remarriage, and violence on family life.
  • Divorce
  • Remarriage and Blended Families
  • Family Violence
  • Alternative Family Forms
  • 18.6: Describe the diversity of family life in the United States.
  • One-Parent Families
  • Cohabitation
  • Gay and Lesbian Couples
  • Singlehood
  • Extended Family Households
  • New Reproductive Technologies and Families
  • Families: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 19: Religion
  • The Power of Society to shape our values and beliefs
  • Religion: Concepts and Theories
  • 19.1: Apply sociology’s major theories to religion.
  • Religion and Sociology
  • Structural-Functional Theory: Functions of Religion
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory: Constructing the Sacred
  • Social-Conflict Theory: Inequality and Religion
  • Feminist Theory: Gender and Religion
  • Religion and Social Change
  • 19.2: Discuss the links between religion and social change.
  • Max Weber: Protestantism and Capitalism
  • Liberation Theology
  • Types of Religious Organizations
  • 19.3: Distinguish among church, sect, and cult.
  • Church
  • Sect
  • Cult
  • Religion in History and Around the World
  • 19.4: Contrast religious patterns around the world.
  • Religion in Preindustrial Societies
  • Religion in Industrial Societies
  • World Religions
  • Christianity
  • Islam
  • Judaism
  • Hinduism
  • Buddhism
  • Confucianism
  • Religion: East and West
  • Religious Trends in the United States
  • 19.5: Analyze patterns of religiosity in the United States.
  • Religious Affiliation
  • Religiosity
  • Religious Diversity: Class, Ethnicity, and Race
  • Secularization
  • Civil Religion
  • “New Age” Seekers: Spirituality without Formal Religion
  • Religious Revival: “Good Old-Time Religion”
  • Religion: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 20: Education
  • The Power of Society to open the door to college
  • Education: A Global Survey
  • 20.1: Compare schooling in high-, middle-, and low-income societies.
  • Schooling and Economic Development
  • Schooling in India
  • Schooling in Japan
  • Schooling in Great Britain
  • Schooling in the United States
  • The Functions of Schooling
  • 20.2: Apply structural-functional theory to schooling.
  • Socialization
  • Cultural Innovation
  • Social Integration
  • Social Placement
  • Latent Functions of Schooling
  • Schooling and Social Interaction
  • 20.3: Apply social-interaction theory to schooling.
  • The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Schooling and Social Inequality
  • 20.4: Apply social-conflict theory to schooling.
  • Social Control
  • Standardized Testing
  • School Tracking
  • Inequality among Schools
  • Access to Higher Education
  • Greater Opportunity: Expanding Higher Education
  • Community Colleges
  • Privilege and Personal Merit
  • Problems in the Schools
  • 20.5: Discuss dropping out, violence, and other problems facing today’s schools.
  • Discipline and Violence
  • Student Passivity
  • Dropping Out
  • Academic Standards
  • Grade Inflation
  • Current Issues in U.S. Education
  • 20.6: Summarize the debate over the performance of U.S. schools.
  • School Choice
  • Home Schooling
  • Schooling People with Disabilities
  • Adult Education
  • The Teacher Shortage
  • Schooling: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 21: Health and Medicine
  • The Power of Society to shape patterns of health
  • What Is Health?
  • 21.1: Explain how patterns of health are shaped by society.
  • Health and Society
  • Health: A Global Survey
  • 21.2: Contrast patterns of health in low- and high-income countries.
  • Health in Low-Income Countries
  • Health in High-Income Countries
  • Health in the United States
  • 21.3: Analyze how race, class, gender, and age are linked to health.
  • Who Is Healthy? Age, Gender, Class, and Race
  • Cigarette Smoking
  • Eating Disorders
  • Obesity
  • Sexually Transmitted Diseases
  • Ethical Issues Surrounding Death
  • The Medical Establishment
  • 21.4: Compare the medical systems in nations around the world.
  • The Rise of Scientific Medicine
  • Holistic Medicine
  • Paying for Medical Care: A Global Survey
  • Paying for Medical Care: The United States
  • The Nursing Shortage
  • Theories of Health and Medicine
  • 21.5: Apply sociology’s major theories to health and medicine.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: Role Analysis
  • Symbolic-Interaction Theory: The Meaning of Health
  • Social-Conflict and Feminist Theories: Inequality and Health
  • Health and Medicine: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Part V: Social Change
  • Chapter 22: Population, Urbanization, and Environment
  • The Power of Society to shape our view of global warming
  • Demography: The Study of Population
  • 22.1: Explain the concepts of fertility, mortality, and migration, and how they affect population si
  • Fertility
  • Mortality
  • Migration
  • Population Growth
  • Population Composition
  • History and Theory of Population Growth
  • 22.2: Analyze population trends using Malthusian theory and demographic transition theory.
  • Malthusian Theory
  • Demographic Transition Theory
  • Global Population Today: A Brief Survey
  • Urbanization: The Growth of Cities
  • 22.3: Summarize patterns of urbanization in the United States and around the world.
  • The Evolution of Cities
  • The Growth of U.S. Cities
  • Suburbs and Urban Decline
  • Postindustrial Sunbelt Cities
  • Megalopolis: The Regional City
  • Edge Cities
  • Changes to Rural Areas
  • Urbanism as a Way of Life
  • 22.4: Identify the contributions of Tönnies, Durkheim, Simmel, Park, Wirth, and Marx to our underst
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
  • Emile Durkheim: Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
  • Georg Simmel: The Blasé Urbanite
  • The Chicago School: Robert Park and Louis Wirth
  • Urban Ecology
  • Urban Political Economy
  • Urbanization in Poor Nations
  • 22.5: Describe the third urban revolution now under way in poor societies.
  • Environment and Society
  • 22.6: Analyze current environmental problems such as pollution and global warming.
  • The Global Dimension
  • Technology and the Environmental Deficit
  • Culture: Growth and Limits
  • Solid Waste: The Disposable Society
  • Water and Air
  • The Rain Forests
  • Global Climate Change
  • Declining Biodiversity
  • Environmental Racism
  • Toward a Sustainable Society and World
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 23: Collective Behavior and Social Movements
  • The Power of Society to encourage or discourage participation in social movements
  • Studying Collective Behavior
  • 23.1: Distinguish various types of collective behavior.
  • Localized Collectivities: Crowds
  • 23.2: Identify five types of crowds and three explanations of crowd behavior.
  • Mobs and Riots
  • Crowds, Mobs, and Social Change
  • Theories of Crowd Behavior
  • Dispersed Collectivities: Mass Behavior
  • 23.3: Describe rumor, disasters, and other types of mass behavior.
  • Rumor and Gossip
  • Public Opinion and Propaganda
  • Fashions and Fads
  • Panic and Mass Hysteria
  • Disasters
  • Social Movements
  • 23.4: Analyze the causes and consequences of social movements.
  • Types of Social Movements
  • Claims Making
  • Explaining Social Movements
  • Gender and Social Movements
  • Stages in Social Movements
  • Social Movements and Social Change
  • Social Movements: Looking Ahead
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Chapter 24: Social Change: Traditional, Modern, and Postmodern Societies
  • The Power of Society to shape our view of science
  • What Is Social Change?
  • 24.1: State four defining characteristics of social change.
  • Causes of Social Change
  • 24.2: Explain how culture, conflict, ideas, and population patterns direct social change.
  • Culture and Change
  • Conflict and Change
  • Ideas and Change
  • Demographic Change
  • Visions of Modernity
  • 24.3: Apply the ideas of Tönnies, Durkheim, Weber, and Marx to our understanding of modernity.
  • Four Dimensions of Modernization
  • Ferdinand Tönnies: The Loss of Community
  • Emile Durkheim: The Division of Labor
  • Max Weber: Rationalization
  • Karl Marx: Capitalism
  • Theories of Modernity
  • 24.4: Contrast analysis of modernity as mass society and as class society.
  • Structural-Functional Theory: Modernity as Mass Society
  • Social-Conflict Theory: Modernity as Class Society
  • Modernity and the Individual
  • Modernity and Progress
  • Modernity: Global Variation
  • Postmodernity
  • 24.5: Discuss postmodernism as one type of social criticism.
  • Modernization and Our Global Future
  • 24.6: Evaluate possible directions of future social change.
  • Seeing Sociology in Everyday Life
  • Seeing Sociology in Your Everyday Life
  • Making the Grade
  • Glossary
  • References
  • Credits
  • Author Index
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
  • Subject Index
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar, Leiga á rafbók í 365 daga, Leiga á rafbók í 180 daga, Leiga á rafbók í 90 daga

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð