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[book]Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research [推广有奖]

玄一无相 在职认证  学生认证  发表于 2014-8-24 19:48:29 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health
Editors: Carol S. Aneshensel, Jo C. Phelan, Alex Bierman


Comprehensive scope, covering both the societal causes and effects of mental illness
Updated research on treatment and health care disparities in mental health
Highlights the sociological influence of race, gender, age and socioeconomic status on the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness


This second edition of the Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health features theory-driven reviews of recent research with a comprehensive approach to the investigation of the ways in which society shapes the mental health of its members and the lives of those who have been diagnosed as having a mental illness


The award-winning Handbook is distinctive in its focus on how the organization and functioning of society influences the occurrence of mental disorder and its consequences. A core issue that runs throughout the text concerns the differential distribution of mental illness across various social strata, defined by status characteristics such as gender, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and age. The contributions to this volume shed light on the social, cultural, and economic factors that explain why some social groups have an elevated risk of disorder. They also address the social repercussions of mental disorder for  individuals, including stigmatization within the larger society, and for their families and social networks.


The second edition of this seminal volume includes substantial updates to previous chapters, as well as seven new chapters on: -The Individual’s Experience of Mental Illness.--The Medicalization of Mental Illness.---Age, Aging, and Mental Health.- -Religion and Mental Health.- -Neighborhoods and Mental Health.- -Mental Health and the Law—and Public Beliefs about Mental Illness.






Content Level » Research


Keywords » Age Differences in Mental Disorder - Behaviorak Model of Health Service Utilization - Community/ survey / studies of mental illness - Impact of Mental Health on Families - Meanings of Mental Illness - Mental Disorders - Psycchiatric Disorder - Religion and Mental Health - Social Consequences of Personal Control - The Sociology of Work and Well-Being



Related subjects » Personality & Social Psychology - Psychiatry - Psychology - Public Health - Social Sciences

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Preface to the Second Edition.- Acknowledgements.- Chapter 1. The Sociology of Mental Health: Surveying the Field; Carol S. Aneshensel.- I. CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ILLNESS.- Chapter 2. Listening to Voices: Patient Experience and the Meanings of Mental Illness; David A. Karp and Lara B. Birk.- Chapter 3. Mental Illness as Psychiatric Disorder; Martha L. Bruce amd Patrick J. Raue.- Chapter 4. The Medicalization of Mental Disorder; Peter Conrad and Caitlin Slodden.- Chapter 5. Public Beliefs about Mental Illness; Jason Schittker.- Chapter 6. The Sociological Study of Mental Illness:A Critique and Synthesis of Four Perspectives; Allan V. Horwitz.-II. METHODOLOGY.- Chapter 7. Issues in Mental Health Assessment; Galan E. Switzer, Mary Amanda Dew and Evelyn J. Bromet.- Chapter 8. Analyzing Associations between Mental Health and Social Circumstances; John Mirowsky.- III. THE SOCIAL DISTRIBUTION OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ILLNESS.- Chapter 9.  Overview of Descriptive Epidemiology of Mental Disorders; Ronald C. Kessler.- Chapter 10. Age, Aging and Mental Health; Kenneth F. Ferraro and Lindsay A. Rinaldo.- Chapter11. Social Stratification, Social Closure and Social Class as Determinants of Mental Health Disparities; Charles Muntaner, Edwin Ng, Christophe Vanroelen, Sharon Christ, and William W. Eaton.- Chapter 12. Social Stratification and Inequality; Jane D. McLeod.- Chapter 13. Race, Nativity, and Cultural Influences in the Sociology of Mental Health; Tony N. Brown, Katharine M. Donato, Mary Therese Laske, and Ebony M. Duncan.- Chapter 14. Gender and Mental Health; Sarah Rosenfield and Dawne Mouzon.- IV. SOCIAL ANTECEDENTS.- Chapter15. Social Stress in the 21st Century; Blair Wheaton, Shirin Montazer, Marisa Young, and Catherine Stuart.- Chapter 16. Current Issues and Future Directions in Research into the Stress Process; Leonard I. Pearlin and Alex Bierman.- Chapter 17. Social Relations, Social Integration, and social Suppoort; J. Blake Turner.- Chapter 18. Self, Identity, Stress and Mental Health; Peggy A. Thoits.- Chapter 19. The Sense of Personal Control: Social Structural Causes and Emotional Consequences; Catherine E. Ross and John Mirowsky.- V. INSTITUTIONAL ANTECEDENTS.- Chapter 20. Family Status and Mental Health: Recent Advances and Future Directions; Debra Umberstone, Mieke Beth Thomeer, and Kristi Williams.- Chapter 21. The Sociology of Work and Well-Being; Mark Tausig.- Chapter 22. Religion and Mental Health; Scott, Schieman, Alex Bierman, and Christopher G. Ellison.- Chapter 23. Neighborhood Context and Mental Health; Terrence D. Hill and David Maimon.- VI. SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES.- Chapter 24. The Social Dynamics of Responding to Mental Health Problems: Past, Present and Future Challenges to Understanding Individuals' Use of Services; Bernice A. Pescosolido, Carol A. Boyer and Tait R. Medina.- Chapter 25. Labeling and Stigma; Bruce G. Link and Jo C. Phelan.- Chapter 26. The Impact of Mental Illness on the Family; William R. Avison and Jinette Comeau.- Chapter 27. Mental Health and the Law; Virginia Aldigé Hiday and Heathcote W. Wales.- VII. SOCIAL CONTINUITIES.- Chapter 28. Life Course Perspectives on Mental Health; Linda K. George.- Chapter 29. Mental Illness as a Career: Sociological Perspectives; Carol S. Aneshensel.-

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玄一无相 在职认证  学生认证  发表于 2014-8-24 23:52:04 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
Handbook of Sociology of Aging
Editors: Richard A. Settersten, Jacqueline L. Angel


Contributors with interdisciplinary backgrounds present the full scope of research
Synthesizes and combines the research on aging and the life course into one volume
Three-tracked approach considers the social phenomena, effect on the life course, and relevant social policies



The Handbook of Sociology of Aging is the most comprehensive and engaging treatment of the field over the past 30 years. It is an indispensable resource for scholars, policy makers, and aging professionals alike.


The Handbook of Sociology of Aging contains 45 far-reaching chapters, authored by nearly 80 of the most renowned experts, on the most pressing topics related to aging today. With its recurring attention to the social forces that shape human aging, and their social consequences and policy implications of it, the contents will be of interest to everyone who cares about what aging means for individuals, families, and societies.


Two forwards highlight the significance of the handbook for scholarship and and policy-making on aging. The chapters illustrate the field’s extraordinary breadth and depth, which have never before been represented in a single volume. They range from foundational matters, including classic and contemporary theories and methods, to topics of longstanding and emergent interest, such as social diversity and inequalities, social relationships, social institutions, economies and governments, social vulnerabilities, public health, and care arrangements. The volume closes with a set of personal essays by senior scholars who share their experiences and hopes for the field, and an essay by the editors that previews some of the most exciting aspects for the decade ahead.


The Handbook of Sociology of Aging showcases the very best that sociology has to offer the study of human aging.



Content Level » Research

Keywords » Demography - Disability - Diversity - Health Care - Life Course - Public Policy - Social Gerontology


Related subjects » Population Studies - Public Health - Social Policy / Labor / Population Economics - Wellbeing & Quality-of-Life


TABLE OF CONTENTSPreface.- Scholarly Foreward.- Policy Foreward.- I. HISTORICAL TRENDS IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF AGING.-Trends in the Sociology of Aging: Thirty Year Observations.-  II.THEORIES AND METHODS IN THE SOCIOLOGY OF AGING.- Theoretical Perspectives on the Sociology of Aging.- Aging Individuals, Families, and Societies: Micro-Meso-Macro Linkages in the Life Course.- Widening the View: Capturing “Unobserved” Heterogeneity in Studies of Age and the Life Course.-  III.SOCIAL DIVERSITY AND INEQUALITIES OF AGING.- Gender and Aging.-Race, Ethnicity, and Aging.- Immigration, Aging, and Health in the United States.-Global Aging.- Diversity and Family Relations in an Aging Society.- IV. SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND AGING.- Social Relations and Aging.- Intergenerational Relations in Later-Life Families.- The Midlife Financial Squeeze: Intergenerational Transfers of Financial Resources within Aging Families.- The Demography of Unions Among Older Americans, 1980–Present: A Family Change Approach.- V.SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND AGING.- Rethinking Retirement.- Learning and Aging.- The Midlife Years: Human Capital and Job Mobility.- The Changing Worlds of Family and Work.- Developing Age-Friendly Communities: New Approaches to Growing Old in Urban Environments.- VI.       ECONOMIES, GOVERNMENT, AND AGING.- Crises and Old Age Politics.-Welfare States: Protecting or Risking Old Age.-Volunteering in Later Life: From Disengagement to Civic Engagement.- Business and Aging: The Boomer Effect on Consumers and Marketing.- Consumption and Aging.-VII. SOCIAL VULNERABILITIES AND AGING.-Planning for Old Age.- Responses of the Long-Term Care System to Recent Natural Disasters.-Elder Mistreatment.- Crime, the Law, and Aging.-Aging Veterans: Needs and Provisions.- VIII. PUBLIC HEALTH AND AGING.- Health and Aging: Early Origins, Persistent Inequalities?.- Mental Health and Aging: A Life-Course Perspective.- Aging with HIV/AIDS.- Obesity: A Sociological Examination.- Religious Involvement, Health Status, and Mortality Risk.- IX. CARE ARRANGEMENTS AND AGING.- Civil Society and Eldercare in Post-Traditional Society.- Population Aging, Health Systems, and Equity: Shared Challenges for the United States and Canada.-Long-Term Care: Tradition and Innovation.- Caregiving and the Life Course: Connecting the Personal and the Public.- X. SOCIOLOGICAL LIVES: PERSONAL REFLECTIONS ON THE SOCIOLOGY OF AGING.- Gerontology with a “J”: Personal Reflections on Theory-Building in the Sociology of Aging.- The Sociology of Aging and the Life Course Comes of Age.- Long Time Coming, Not Here Yet: The Possibilities of the Social in Age and Life Course Studies.- Looking Back: My Half Century as a Sociologist of Aging and Society.- As Time Goes By: Gerontological and Life Course Musings.- Studying Age Across Borders.- Living the Gendered Life Course in Time and Space.- XI. THE FUTURE OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF AGING- Sociology of Aging in the Decade Ahead.- About the Editors and Contributors.


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玄一无相 在职认证  学生认证  发表于 2014-8-24 23:55:03 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
Handbook of the Sociology of Health, Illness, and Healing
A Blueprint for the 21st Century


Takes medical sociology to the next level by investigating the roles of social forces in health, illness and healing
Provides updates on the field since the last major Handbook of Medical Sociology was published in 2001
The editors have chaired sections of ASA divisions (Medical Sociology, Mental Health, and Children and Youth) as well as the governance of ASA itself (former VP of ASA)
The Handbook of the Sociology of Health, Illness & Healing advances the understanding of medical sociology by identifying the most important contemporary challenges to the field and suggesting directions for future inquiry. The editors provide a blueprint for guiding research and teaching agendas for the first quarter of the 21st century.


In a series of essays, this volume offers a systematic view of the critical questions that face our understanding of the role of social forces in health, illness and healing. It also provides an overall theoretical framework and asks medical sociologists to consider the implications of taking on new directions and approaches. Such issues may include the importance of multiple levels of influences, the utility of dynamic, life course approaches, the role of culture, the impact of social networks, the importance of fundamental causes approaches, and the influences of state structures and policy making.


Content Level » Research

Keywords » Health Care - Health Policy - medical sociology - sociology of mental health


Related subjects » Public Health - Social Sciences

Part I Rethinking Connecting Sociology’s Role in Health,
Illness, & Healing, From the Top Down
1 Taking “The Promise” Seriously: Medical Sociology’s Role
in Health, Illness, and Healing in a Time of Social Change .......................................... 3
Bernice A. Pescosolido
2 Medical Sociology and Its Relationship to Other Disciplines:
The Case of Mental Health and the Ambivalent Relationship
Between Sociology and Psychiatry .................................................................................. 21
Anne Rogers and David Pilgrim
3 Organizing the Sociological Landscape for the Next Decades
of Health and Health Care Research: The Network Episode
Model III-R as Cartographic Subfield Guide................................................................. 39
Bernice A. Pescosolido
4 Fundamental Causality: Challenges of an Animating Concept
for Medical Sociology........................................................................................................ 67
Jeremy Freese and Karen Lutfey
Part II Connecting Communities
5 Learning from Other Countries: Comparing Experiences
and Drawing Lessons for the United States.................................................................... 85
Mary Ruggie
6 Health and the Social Rights of Citizenship: Integrating Welfare-State
Theory and Medical Sociology......................................................................................... 101
Sigrun Olafsdottir and Jason Beckfield
7 Health Social Movements: Advancing Traditional
Medical Sociology Concepts............................................................................................. 117
Phil Brown, Rachel Morello-Frosch, Stephen Zavestoski,
Laura Senier, Rebecca Gasior Altman, Elizabeth Hoover,

Sabrina McCormick, Brian Mayer, and Crystal Adams
8 Layering Control: Medicalization, Psychopathy,
and the Increasing Multi-institutional Management
of Social Problems............................................................................................................. 139
Tait R. Medina and Ann McCranie
9 Community Systems Collide and Cooperate: Control of Deviance
by the Legal and Mental Health Systems ....................................................................... 159
Virginia Aldigé Hiday
Part III Connecting To Medicine: The Profession and Its Organizations
10 Medicalization and Biomedicalization Revisited: Technoscience
and Transformations of Health, Illness and American Medicine................................. 173
Adele E. Clarke and Janet Shim
11 Two Cultures: Two Ships: The Rise of a Professionalism Movement
Within Modern Medicine and Medical Sociology’s Disappearance
from the Professionalism Debate ..................................................................................... 201
Frederic W. Hafferty and Brian Castellani
12 Medicine as a Family-Friendly Profession?.................................................................... 221
Ann Boulis and Jerry A. Jacobs
13 Clash of Logics, Crisis of Trust: Entering the Era
of Public For-Profit Health Care? ................................................................................... 255
Carol A. Caronna
14 Health Care Policy and Medical Sociology..................................................................... 271
Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld
Part IV Connecting To the People: The Public as Patient and Powerful Force
15 The Consumer Turn in Medicalization: Future Directions
with Historical Foundations............................................................................................. 291
Anne E. Figert
16 Mundane Medicine, Therapeutic Relationships, and the Clinical
Encounter: Current and Future Agendas for Sociology ............................................... 309
Carl May
17 After 30 Years, Problems and Prospects in the Study
of Doctor–Patient Interaction .......................................................................................... 323
John Heritage and Douglas W. Maynard
18 Enter Health Information Technology: Expanding Theories
of the Doctor–Patient Relationship for the Twenty-First Century

Health Care Delivery System........................................................................................... 343
Part V Connecting Personal & Cultural Systems
19 Culture, Race/Ethnicity and Disparities: Fleshing Out the Socio-Cultural
Framework for Health Services Disparities ................................................................... 363
Margarita Alegría, Bernice A. Pescosolido, Sandra Williams,
and Glorisa Canino
20 Health Disparities and the Black Middle Class: Overview, Empirical Findings,
and Research Agenda ....................................................................................................... 383
Pamela Braboy Jackson and Jason Cummings
21 Gender and Health Revisited........................................................................................... 411
Jen’nan Ghazal Read and Bridget K. Gorman
22 Hearsay Ethnography: A Method for Learning About Responses
to Health Interventions..................................................................................................... 431
Susan Cotts Watkins, Ann Swidler, and Crystal Biruk
Part VI Connecting to Dynamics: The Health and Illness Career
23 Life Course Approaches to Health, Illness and Healing................................................ 449
Eliza K. Pavalko and Andrea E. Willson
24 The Complexities of Help-Seeking: Exploring Challenges Through
a Social Network Perspective ........................................................................................... 465
Normand Carpentier and Paul Bernard
Part VII Connecting the Individual and the Body
25 Bodies in Context: Potential Avenues of Inquiry for the Sociology
of Chronic Illness and Disability Within a New Policy Era .......................................... 483
Caroline Sanders and Anne Rogers
26 Identity and Illness............................................................................................................ 505
Kathryn J. Lively and Carrie L. Smith
27 Learning to Love Animal (Models) (or) How (Not)
to Study Genes as a Social Scientist................................................................................. 527
Dalton Conley
28 Taking the Medical Sciences Seriously: Why and How
Medical Sociology Should Incorporate Diverse Disciplinary
Perspectives........................................................................................................................ 543
Brea L. Perry

Index........................................................................................................................................... 563


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玄一无相 在职认证  学生认证  发表于 2014-8-24 23:57:43 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
Handbook of the Sociology of Morality
Editors: Steven Hitlin, Stephen Vaisey


First Handbook to discuss sociology and morality
Includes contributions from psychologists, political scientists, education as well as sociologists
Reopens a field long ignored by sociology but becoming prominent again
Human beings necessarily understand their social worlds in moral terms, orienting their lives, relationships, and activities around socially-produced notions of right and wrong.


Morality is sociologically understood as more than simply helping or harming others; it encompasses any way that individuals form understandings of what behaviors are better than others, what goals are most laudable, and what "proper" people believe, feel, and do. Morality involves the explicit and implicit sets of rules and shared understandings that keep human social groups intact. Morality includes both the "shoulds" and "should nots" of human activity, its proactive and inhibitive elements.


At one time, sociologists were centrally concerned with morality, issues like social cohesion, values, the goals and norms that structure society, and the ways individuals get socialized to reproduce those concerns. In the last half-century, however, explicit interest in these topics has waned, and modern sociology has become uninterested in these matters and morality has become marginalized within the discipline.


But a resurgence in the topic is happening in related disciplines – psychology, neurology, philosophy, and anthropology - and in the wider national discourse. Sociology has much to offer, but is not fully engaged in this conversation. Many scholars work on areas that would fall under the umbrella of a sociology of morality but do not self-identify in such a manner, nor orient their efforts toward conceptualizing what we know, and should know, along these dimensions.


The Handbook of the Sociology of Morality fills a niche within sociology making explicit the shared concerns of scholars across the disciplines as they relate to an often-overlooked dimension of human social life. It is unique in social science as it would be the first systematic compilation of the wider social structural, cultural, cross-national, organizational, and interactional dimension of human moral (understood broadly) thought, feeling, and behavior.


Content Level » Research

Keywords » Altruism - American Values - Ethics - Moral - Moral Development - Moral Relativism - Nation - Religion and Morality - Social Justice - Social Movements - Social Order - Social Stratification - Sociological Theory


Related subjects » Applied Ethics & Social Responsibility - Religious Studies - Social Sciences


Table of Contents
Introduction: The Return of the Moral ........................ v
Michèle Lamont
Contributors ....................................... ix
Part I. Sociological Perspectives on Morality
(“What Is It”?) ................................ 1
Chapter 1. Back to the Future .......................... 3
Steven Hitlin and Stephen Vaisey
Chapter 2. The Cognitive Approach to Morality ................ 15
Raymond Boudon
Chapter 3. Four Concepts of Morality ..................... 35
Christopher Powell
Chapter 4. Adumbrations of a Sociology of Morality in the Work
of Parsons, Simmel, and Merton .................. 57
Donald N. Levine
Chapter 5. The (Im)morality of War ...................... 73
Edward A. Tiryakian
Chapter 6. Social Order as Moral Order .................... 95
Anne Warfield Rawls
Part II. Sociological Contexts (“Where Does It Come From?”) .......... 123
Chapter 7. Natural Selection and the Evolution of Morality in
Human Societies ........................... 125
Jonathan H. Turner

Chapter 8. The Sacred and the Profane in the Marketplace ......... 147
Chapter 9. Class and Morality .......................... 163
Andrew Sayer
Chapter 10. The Unstable Alliance of Law and Morality ............ 179
Carol A. Heimer
Chapter 11. Morality in Organizations ...................... 203
Robert Jackall
Chapter 12. Explaining Crime as Moral Actions ................ 211
Per-Olof H. Wikström
Chapter 13. What Does God Require? Understanding Religious
Context and Morality ........................ 241
Christopher D. Bader and Roger Finke
Chapter 14. The Duality of American Moral Culture .............. 255
Wayne Baker
Chapter 15. Education and the Culture Wars .................. 275
Jeffrey S. Dill and James Davison Hunter
Chapter 16. The Creation and Establishment of Moral Vocabularies ..... 293
Brian M. Lowe
Part III. Morality in Action (“How Does It Work?”) ................ 313
Chapter 17. The Trouble with Invisible Men ................... 315
Robb Willer, Matthew Feinberg, Kyle Irwin,
Michael Schultz, and Brent Simpson
Chapter 18. The Justice/Morality Link ...................... 331
Karen A. Hegtvedt and Heather L. Scheuerman
Chapter 19. Toward an Integrated Science of Morality ............. 361
Rengin Firat and Chad Michael McPherson
Chapter 20. The Social Psychology of the Moral Identity ............ 385
Jan E. Stets
Chapter 21. Morality and Mind-Body Connections ............... 411
Gabriel Ignatow
Chapter 22. Moral Power ............................. 425

Jal Mehta and Christopher Winship
Chapter 23. Moral Dimensions of the Work–Family Nexus .......... 439
Mary Blair-Loy
Chapter 24. Moral Classification and Social Policy ............... 455
Brian Steensland
Chapter 25. The Moral Construction of Risk .................. 469
Leslie T. Roth
Chapter 26. Moral Discourse in Economic Contexts .............. 485
Rebekah P. Massengill and Amy Reynolds
Chapter 27. Morality in the Social Interactional and Discursive
World of Everyday Life ....................... 503
Jason J. Turowetz and Douglas W. Maynard
Part IV. Future Directions for Sociological Science ................. 527
Chapter 28. Morality, Modernity, and World Society .............. 529
Sabine Frerichs and Richard Münch
Chapter 29. The Social Construction of Morality? ............... 549
Steven Lukes
Chapter 30. What’s New and What’s Old about the New Sociology
of Morality .............................. 561
Gabriel Abend

Subject Index ....................................... 585


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玄一无相 在职认证  学生认证  发表于 2014-8-25 00:00:16 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
Handbook of Politics
State and Society in Global Perspective


Editors: Kevin T. Leicht, J. Craig Jenkins


Focuses on the methodological developments in political sociology
Emphasizes the interdisciplinary connections in political sociology
Covers the theoretical and historical developments in the field
Contributions focus on current debates and are written by leaders in the field
Kevin T. Leicht, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
J. Craig Jenkins, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA


Political sociology is the interdisciplinary study of power and the intersection of personality, society and politics. The field also examines how the political process is affected by major social trends as well as exploring how social policies are altered by various social forces.


Political sociologists increasingly use a wide variety of relatively new quantitative and qualitative methodologies and incorporate theories and research from other social science cognate disciplines. The contributors focus on the current controversies and disagreements surrounding the use of different methodologies for the study of politics and society, and discussions of specific applications found in the widely scattered literature where substantive research in the field is published. This approach will solidly place the handbook in a market niche that is not occupied by the current volumes while also covering many of the same theoretical and historical developments that the other volumes cover.


The purpose of this handbook is to summarize state-of-the-art theory, research, and methods used in the study of politics and society. This area of research encompasses a wide variety of perspectives and methods that span social science disciplines. The handbook is designed to reflect that diversity in content, method and focus. In addition, it will cover developments in the developed and underdeveloped worlds.


Content Level » Research

Keywords » Civil Society - Globalization - Institution - Nation - Neo-Functionalism - Political Economy - Political Sociology - Social Movements - Social Theory - Sociological Methodology - Terrorism - Transnational - environment - mass media - public opinion


Related subjects » Political Science - Social Sciences


Contents
Contributors .................................................................................................................... v
Chapter 1. Introduction: The Study of Politics Enters
the Twenty-First Century ......................................................................... 1
Kevin T. Leicht and J. Craig Jenkins
Part I Theory in the Study of Politics
Chapter 2. Institutional Theory .................................................................................. 15
Edwin Amenta and Kelly M. Ramsey
Chapter 3. Redesigning the State, Reorienting State Power,
and Rethinking the State .......................................................................... 41
Bob Jessop
Chapter 4. Public Opinion, Public Policy, and Democracy ...................................... 63
Paul Burstein
Chapter 5. Democracy, Professions and Societal Constitutionalism ....................... 81
David Sciulli
Chapter 6. Power, Politics, and the Civil Sphere ....................................................... 111
Jeffrey C. Alexander
Chapter 7. On the Origins of Neoliberalism: Political Shifts
and Analytical Challenges ........................................................................ 127
Nitsan Chorev
Chapter 8. Transboundary Politics ............................................................................. 145
Jason Beckfield

Chapter 9. Elite Theory and Elites ............................................................................. 161
Chapter 10. Conflict Theory ....................................................................................... 177
A. Oberschall
Chapter 11. When and Where Class Matters for Political Outcomes:
Class and Politics in a Cross-National Perspective .............................. 195
Kazimierz M. Slomczynski and Joshua Kjerulf Dubrow
Part II Political Change and Transformation
Chapter 12. Social Movements and Contentious Politics ......................................... 217
David S. Meyer and Daisy Verduzco Reyes
Chapter 13. Political Violence as an Object of Study: The Need
for Taxonomic Clarity ............................................................................. 235
Edward Crenshaw and Kristopher Robison
Chapter 14. Corporations, Capitalists, and Campaign Finance .............................. 247
Val Burris
Chapter 15. States and Economic Development ........................................................ 263
Matthew Lange
Chapter 16. Gender, Politics, and Women’s Empowerment .................................... 279
Valentine M. Moghadam
Chapter 17. Globalization and Collective Action ...................................................... 305
Paul D. Almeida
Chapter 18. Cultural Analysis of Political Protest .................................................... 327
Hank Johnston
Chapter 19. Religion and Post-secular Politics .......................................................... 349
Christopher Pieper and Michael P. Young
Chapter 20. Space and Politics .................................................................................... 367
Gregory Hooks and Linda Lobao
Chapter 21. Politics and the Environment ................................................................. 385
Robert J. Brulle
Chapter 22. Politics as a Cultural Phenomenon ........................................................ 407
Liah Greenfeld and Eric Malczewski
Chapter 23. Urban Politics .......................................................................................... 423
Terry Nichols Clark and Rachel Harvey
Chapter 24. Democracy and Democratization .......................................................... 441

Georg Sørensen
Chapter 25. Authoritarian State and Contentious Politics ....................................... 459
Dingxin Zhao
Chapter 26. Mass Media and Democratic Politics .................................................... 477
Delia Dumitrescu and Anthony Mughan
Chapter 27. Elections and Voting ............................................................................... 493
Kent Redding, Peter J. Barwis, and Nik Summers
Chapter 28. The Politics of Economic Inequality ...................................................... 521
David Brady and Benjamin Sosnaud
Chapter 29. The Political Sociology of Criminal Justice .......................................... 543
David Jacobs
Part III Methods in the Study of Politics
Chapter 30. Comparative-Historical Methodology in Political Sociology ................. 571
Edgar Kiser and Steve Pfaff
Chapter 31. Multilevel Models .................................................................................... 589
Andrew S. Fullerton, Michael Wallace, and Michael J. Stern
Chapter 32. Event History Methods ........................................................................... 605
Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier and Anand E. Sokhey
Chapter 33. Social Networks and Political Analysis ................................................. 619
Clayton D. Peoples
Chapter 34. Time Series Analysis of Political Change .............................................. 637
David L. Weakliem

Index ................................................................................................................................. 653


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btlover 发表于 2014-8-25 00:13:00 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群

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西交共享 发表于 2014-8-25 00:29:01 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
收藏了,多谢楼主

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fantuanxiaot 发表于 2014-8-25 00:50:56 |显示全部楼层 |坛友微信交流群
辛苦了!!!!!!!!!!

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