Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
``Judith Blau's Companion is an impressive collection by a sociologist/editor who clearly knows her field and has done her homework. The volume is comprehensive enough to serve as a lifetime sociological companion,and will be useful not only to researchers,teachers,and students,but to sociologically curious general
readers.''
Herbert J. Gans,Columbia University
``Judith Blau has assembled an impressive group of international scholars who
have written essays on the cutting edge of sociology today. Not only are the
chapters first rate,but the range of topics is creative and new. The book reflects some of the changes in sociology over the last decade,and it presents new
agendas for sociology in the next decade,and beyond. This exciting book is àmust read' for all sociologists.''
Jonathan H. Turner, University of California-Riverside
BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO SOCIOLOGY
The Blackwell Companions to Sociology provide introductions to emerging
topics and theoretical orientations in sociology as well as presenting the scope and quality of the discipline as it is currently configured. Essays in the Companions tackle broad themes or central puzzles within the field and are authored by key scholars who have spent considerable time in research and reflection on the
questions and controversies that have activated interest in their area. This
authoritative series will interest those studying sociology at advanced under-
graduate or graduate level as well as scholars in the social sciences and informed readers in applied disciplines.
The Blackwell Companion to Social Theory,Second Edition
Edited by Bryan S. Turner
The Blackwell Companion to Major Social Theorists
Edited by George Ritzer
The Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology
Edited by Kate Nash and Alan Scott
The Blackwell Companion to Medical Sociology
Edited by William C. Cockerham
The Blackwell Companion to Sociology
Edited by Judith R. Blau
The Blackwell Companion to Major Classical Social Theorists
Edited by George Ritzer
The Blackwell Companion to Major Contemporary Social Theorists
Edited by George Ritzer
The Blackwell Companion to Criminology
Edited by Colin Sumner
The Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Families
Edited by Jacqueline Scott,Judith Treas,and Martin Richards
The Blackwell Companion to Social Movements
Edited by David A. Snow,Sarah A. Soule,and Hanspeter Kriesi
The Blackwell Companion to Law and Society
Edited by Austin Sarat
Forthcoming
The Blackwell Companion to Social Inequalities
Edited by Mary Romero and Eric Margolis
The Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Culture
Edited by Mark Jacobs and Nancy Hanrahan
The Blackwell Companion to
Sociology
Edited by
Judith R. Blau
© 2001, 2004 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd
except for editorial material and organization © 2001, 2004 by Judith R. Blau
BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
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First published 2001
First published in paperback 2004 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Reprinted 2004
Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data
The Blackwell companion to sociology / edited by Judith R. Blau.
p. cm.—(Blackwell companions to sociology)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0‒631‒21318‒X (hc : alk. paper) — ISBN 1‒4051‒2267‒6 (pbk : alk. paper)
1. Sociology. I. Series.
HM585 .B53 2000
301—dc21
00‐025860
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Contents
Preface
x
List of Contributors
xvii
Part I Referencing Globalization
1
1 The Sociology of Space and Place
3
John Urry
Contents
2 Media and Communications
16
John Durham Peters
3 Modernity: One or Many?
30
Peter Wagner
4 Emerging Trends in Environmental Sociology
43
Frederick H. Buttel and August Gijswijt
5 Bringing in Codependence
58
Judith R. Blau
Part II Relationships and Meaning
71
6 Civil Society: a Signifier of Plurality and Sense of Wholeness
73
Barbara A. Misztal
7 Human Rights
86
Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naìm
viii
Contents
8 Sociology of Religion
100
Christian Smith and Robert D. Woodberry
9 Intimate Relationships
114
Raine Dozier and Pepper Schwartz
10 Immigrant Families and Their Children: Adaptation and Identity
Formation
128
Carola SuaÂrez-Orozco
Part III Economic Inequalities
141
11 On Inequality
143
Siddiqur Rahman Osmani
12 The Persistence of Poverty in a Changing World
161
Melvin L. Oliver and David M. Grant
13 Racial Economic Inequality in the USA
178
William A. Darity, Jr and Samuel L. Myers, Jr
14 Rediscovering Rural America
196
Bonnie Thornton Dill
Part IV Science, Knowledge, and Ideas
211
15 The Sociology of Science and the Revolution in Molecular Biology
213
Troy Duster
16 Structures of Knowledge
227
Richard E. Lee and Immanuel Wallerstein
17 The New Sociology of Ideas
236
Charles Camic and Neil Gross
Part V Politics and Political Movements
251
18 Political Sociology
253
Mike Savage
19 Why Social Movements Come into Being and Why People Join
Them
268
Bert Klandermans
20 Social Movement Politics and Organization
282
Debra C. Minkoff
Contents
ix
Part VI Structures: Stratification, Networks, and Firms
295
21 Occupations, Stratification, and Mobility
297
Donald J. Treiman
22 Social Networks
314
Bonnie Erickson
23 Networks and Organizations
327
David Knoke
Part VII Individuals and Their Well-Being
343
24 Social Inequality, Stress, and Health
345
Joseph E. Schwartz
25 Two Research Traditions in the Sociology of Education
361
Maureen T. Hallinan
26 Aging and Aging Policy in the USA
375
Madonna Harrington Meyer and Pamela Herd
27 Immigration and Ethnicity: the United States at the
Dawn of the Twenty-first Century
389
RubeÂn G. Rumbaut
28 Social Psychology
407
Lynn Smith-Lovin
Part VIII Social Action
421
29 Immigrant Women and Paid Domestic Work: Research, Theory,
and Activism
423
Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo
30 The Subject and Societal Movements
437
Alain Touraine
31 The Myth of the Labor Movement
450
Rick Fantasia
Appendix: Data Resources on the World Wide Web
464
Compiled by Kathryn Harker
Bibliography
524
Index
588
Preface
Sociology, like other fields, is undergoing rapid transformation owing to
enhanced global interdependencies and changes in the underpinnings of social
and economic life. The intensification of the global economy, the rapid develop-
ment of new communications technology, and the declining robustness of mod-
ernity's structures and institutions pose new puzzles for inquiry. As Agnes Heller describes modern social arrangements, ``nothing here fits perfectly with anything else. There are relatively separate spheres, many major discrepancies, several
discourses, panels, fragments, and niches.'' Building on this premise, I want to suggest that modern social arrangements exhibit few solidities, as well as little specificity about accountability, organization, structure, and norms. Yet, paradoxically, there is more basis for solidarities as emergent global formations
reveal important communalities.
Preface
Although sociology maintains a distinctive focus on groups, populations, and
societies, the field is increasingly receptive to theories, concepts, and methodologies from other academic and applied fields. In addition to this growing
acceptance of other approaches, sociology reveals several other trends. First,
many of the classic analytical distinctions ± such as macro versus micro and
interpretive versus explanatory ± no longer have the vigor they formerly did. An indication of this is that neither the macro±micro divide nor the interpretive±
explanatory contrast applies to such current concepts as embeddedness, social
construction, social capital, engagement, and contextualism. Second, although
the quantitative±qualitative division does distinguish between current methodo-
logical approaches, it is often ignored because of an interest in advancing
descriptive understanding and in achieving more synthetic accounts.
A third significant change is the more rapid pace of restructuring of subspe-
cialties in sociology. An indication of this, at least in the USA, is that more than one-third (14 out of 39) of the sections in the American Sociological Association Preface
xi
were founded in the 1990s, while the other two-thirds were formed at a rela-
tively slow pace beginning in the early 1960s. Fourth, most significantly, soci-
ology is increasingly international, which will have far-reaching consequences
for knowledge and understanding in ways that cannot now be predicted. Cur-
rently, this internationalist focus is reflected in an interest in essentialist and universalistic categories, namely those of race, ethnicity, gender, and class. These are central in understanding how people construct their own and others' identities; they also underlie and shape persisting inequalities.
In selecting topics for this volume, I wanted to include areas that are well
defined and highly robust, in which research and inquiry will long continue, as
well as newly emerging specialties now taking shape, often around interdiscip-
linary concerns. In general, the chapters collectively achieve three major objectives. First, as globalization processes accelerate, as they no doubt will,
knowledge about and understanding of aspects of globalization are especially
important. A second objective was to provide readers with a perspective on
established fields in which researchers are asking new and exciting questions.
Areas in sociology that have such a rich and complex framework include
political sociology, sociology of education and of health, and the study of
inequality and poverty.
A third objective was to include various diagnostic approaches that provoke
critique. What are the most pressing problems of human rights, and what are the
conceptions and debates dealing with social and economic justice? There are
clear indications that sociologists have veered from a value-free science ± which was a myth at best ± and are interested in questions of justice and rights. We