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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
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Stets, Jan E.; Asencio, Emily K. – Social Forces, 2008
Many theories in the sociology of emotions assume that emotions emerge from the cognitive consistency principle. Congruence among cognitions produces good feelings whereas incongruence produces bad feelings. A work situation is simulated in which managers give feedback to workers that is consistent or inconsistent with what the workers expect to…
Descriptors: Sociology, Social Theories, Feedback (Response), Emotional Response
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Sanderson, Stephen K.; Heckert, D. Alex; Dubrow, Joshua K. – Social Forces, 2005
This study tested three types of theories of gender inequality in preindustrial societies by using half the societies in the Standard Cross-Cultural Sample: militarist, Marxian, and non-Marxian materialist theories. The first phase of the research used simple cross-tabulations with chi-square as a test of significance and gamma as a measure of…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Social Bias, Marxian Analysis, Social Science Research
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Piskorski, Mikolaj Jan; Casciaro, Tiziana – Social Forces, 2006
We propose a theory which predicts that an increase in an actor's relative power reduces the actor's rewards in high mutual dependence dyads. Our argument is based on the premise that higher relative power gives the more powerful actor a greater share of surplus, but it also reduces dyadic exchange frequency, which lowers the expected magnitude of…
Descriptors: Rewards, Power Structure, Networks, Social Exchange Theory
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van de Rijt, Arnout; Macy, Michael W. – Social Forces, 2006
A division of labor is mediated by exchange of valued goods and services. We use social exchange theory to extend this principal to "labors of love." Sexual activity in a close personal relationship seems outside the domain of bargaining and exchange. Nevertheless, we explore the possibility that this most intimate of human relations is influenced…
Descriptors: Evidence, Interpersonal Attraction, Interpersonal Relationship, Sexuality