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Schaefer, David R. – Social Forces, 2012
This study outlines a new explanation for homophily in social networks that is neither intended nor imposed by constraints on partner choices. Rather, homophily is an endogenous product of the emergent exchange process, in which actors seek high-value partners who reciprocate their gestures. Whereas all actors initially direct exchange toward…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Social Exchange Theory, Laboratory Experiments, Homosexuality
Kuwabara, Ko; Sheldon, Oliver – Social Forces, 2012
In their concerted efforts to unpack the microprocesses that transform repeated exchanges into an exchange relation, exchange theorists have paid little attention to how actors perceive changes and dynamics in exchanges over time. We help fill this gap by studying how temporal patterns of exchange affect the development of cohesion. Some exchange…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Vignettes, Task Analysis, Surveys
Tittle, Charles R.; Antonaccio, Olena; Botchkovar, Ekaterina – Social Forces, 2012
This study reports a cross-cultural test of Social Learning Theory using direct measures of social learning constructs and focusing on the causal structure implied by the theory. Overall, the results strongly confirm the main thrust of the theory. Prior criminal reinforcement and current crime-favorable definitions are highly related in all three…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Socialization, Crime, Reinforcement
Fine, Gary Alan – Social Forces, 2013
How at moments of dramatic change and a shifting social context do political actors alter their public identities? Put differently, how do political figures respond when positions with which they have been closely identified are no longer morally and electorally defensible and must be altered? Responses to identity challenge within institutional…
Descriptors: Stakeholders, Racial Segregation, Social Studies, Audience Awareness
Sassler, Sharon; Joyner, Kara – Social Forces, 2011
Research has extensively examined matching on race and other characteristics in cohabitation and marriage, but it has generally disregarded sexual and romantic relationships. Using data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth and the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we examine the tempo of key transitions in the recent…
Descriptors: Evidence, Race, Marriage, Young Adults
Silver, Daniel; Clark, Terry Nichols; Yanez, Clemente Jesus Navarro – Social Forces, 2010
This article builds on an important but underdeveloped social science concept--the "scene" as a cluster of urban amenities--to contribute to social science theory and subspecialties such as urban and rural, class, race and gender studies. Scenes grow more important in less industrial, more expressively-oriented and contingent societies where…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Social Environment, Quality of Life, Neighborhoods
Hysom, Stuart J. – Social Forces, 2009
I designed an experiment to test predictions, derived from expectation states theories, that the unequal allocation of social rewards among collective task-focused actors will affect the actors' rates of power and prestige behavior. Past research shows that allocations of exchangeable resources can have these effects. The prediction, however, is…
Descriptors: Prediction, Rewards, Reputation, Status
Crenshaw, Edward; Robison, Kristopher – Social Forces, 2010
This study establishes a socio-demographic theory of international development derived from selected classical and contemporary sociological theories. Four hypotheses are tested: (1. population growth's effect on development depends on age-structure; (2. historic population density (used here as an indicator of preindustrial social complexity)…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Sociolinguistics, Population Growth, Developing Nations
Hallerod, Bjorn – Social Forces, 2011
Are children's statements about their futures related to outcomes in middle age? In 1966 almost 13,500 children ages 12-13 were asked whether they thought their futures would be worse, similar or better as compared to others of their own age. It was shown that children with low, and surprisingly high, expectations did suffer from increased…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Labor Market, Risk, Children
Hughes, Melanie M.; Peterson, Lindsey; Harrison, Jill Ann; Paxton, Pamela – Social Forces, 2009
World polity theory is explicitly relational, implying a global network structure that exists outside of the nation-state. And world polity theory increasingly acknowledges power--that some states and regions are dominant in the international field. But current world polity measures of international non-governmental organizations do not…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Political Affiliation, Classification, Global Approach
Clarke, Philippa; Marshall, Victor; House, James; Lantz, Paula – Social Forces, 2011
The sociology of aging draws on a broad array of theoretical perspectives and social theories from several disciplines, but rarely has it developed its own theories or theoretical perspectives. We build on past work to further advance and empirically test a model of mental health framed in terms of structural theorizing and situated within the…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Sociology, Social Theories, Interdisciplinary Approach
Levanon, Asaf; England, Paula; Allison, Paul – Social Forces, 2009
Occupations with a greater share of females pay less than those with a lower share, controlling for education and skill. This association is explained by two dominant views: devaluation and queuing. The former views the pay offered in an occupation to affect its female proportion, due to employers' preference for men--a gendered labor queue. The…
Descriptors: Females, Employment Patterns, Educational Attainment, Salary Wage Differentials
Stack, Steven; Adamczyk, Amy; Cao, Liqun – Social Forces, 2010
Explanations of variability in public opinion on crime have drawn disproportionately from the literature on specific symbolic orientations including religious fundamentalism and racial prejudice. In contrast, this article hypothesizes that public opinion is linked to the strength of a general cultural axis of nations: survivalism vs.…
Descriptors: Investigations, Public Opinion, Cross Cultural Studies, Predictor Variables
Ruef, Martin; Patterson, Kelly – Social Forces, 2009
Under conditions of uncertainty, we predict that development will be tied to the idiosyncrasy of organizational forms represented within local regions. Our investigation applies this theory to data on 342 counties and 43,352 businesses in the U.S. South during Reconstruction, finding support for the thesis that organizational idiosyncrasy…
Descriptors: United States History, Community Development, Business, Counties
Cheng, Simon; Lively, Kathryn J. – Social Forces, 2009
Recent public health research has consistently reported that self-identified multiracial adolescents tend to display more problem behaviors and psychological difficulties than monoracial adolescents. Relying on insights from qualitative analyses using small or clinical samples to interpret these empirical patterns, these studies implicitly assume…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Multiracial Persons, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Behavior Problems
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