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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
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Park, Chan-ung; Subramanian, S. V. – Social Forces, 2012
Generalized trust varies across individuals and countries. Past studies on trust have demonstrated that voluntary association membership, inequality and ethnic homogeneity at country level are important. However, those studies examined either individual-level or country-level factors separately. In this paper, we conceptualized the emergence of…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Income, Voluntary Agencies, Individual Characteristics
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Mayrl, Damon; Uecker, Jeremy E. – Social Forces, 2011
Going to college has long been assumed to liberalize students' religious beliefs. Using longitudinal data from the National Study of Youth and Religion, we compare change in the content of religious beliefs of those who do and do not attend college. We find that, in general, college students are no more likely to develop liberal religious beliefs…
Descriptors: Campuses, Religion, Young Adults, Religious Factors
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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
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Kremp, Pierre-Antoine – Social Forces, 2010
This article analyzes the determinants of innovation and success of innovation in the field of U.S. symphony orchestras from 1879 through 1959: why did major orchestras (N = 27) innovate by introducing works of new composers to the repertoire instead of sticking to canonical pieces? Can organizational processes account for the selection and the…
Descriptors: Musicians, Innovation, Selection, Music
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Eaves, Lindon J.; Hatemi, Peter K.; Prom-Womley, Elizabeth C.; Murrelle, Lenn – Social Forces, 2008
The authors explore the contributions of social and genetic influences to religious attitudes and practices in a population-based sample of 11-18 year olds and their mothers who responded to a Religious Attitudes and Practices Inventory and Religious Rearing Practices Inventory respectively. Contrary to genetic studies examining adult religious…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Genetics, Social Environment, Religious Factors
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Fullerton, Andrew S.; Villemez, Wayne J. – Social Forces, 2011
Several recent studies across the social sciences show that the spatial agglomeration of employment in a local labor market benefits both firms and workers in terms of better firm performance and higher wages. Drawing from the organizational ecology perspective, we argue that workers receive higher wages in large industrial clusters and urban…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Urban Areas, Geographic Distribution, Social Environment
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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
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Mood, Carina – Social Forces, 2010
This article places the choice to claim welfare benefits in a social context by studying how neighborhood welfare receipt affects welfare receipt among couples in Stockholm, Sweden. It is expected that the propensity to claim welfare should increase with welfare use in the neighborhood, primarily through stigma reduction and increasing…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Foreign Countries, Social Influences, Social Environment
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Hipp, John R. – Social Forces, 2009
Using a sample of households nested in census tracts in 24 metropolitan areas over four time points, this study provides a robust test of the determinants of neighborhood satisfaction, taking into account the census tract context. Consistent with social disorganization theory, the presence of racial/ethnic heterogeneity and single-parent…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Family (Sociological Unit), Metropolitan Areas, Place of Residence
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Wiepking, Pamala; Maas, Ineke – Social Forces, 2009
In this study we examine whether and why human and social resources increase charitable giving. Using the Giving in The Netherlands Panel Study 2003, we find that people with more extended networks and higher education are more generous. However, these effects can be completely explained by financial resources, church attendance, requests for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Verbal Ability, Social Networks, Human Resources
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Isaac, Larry – Social Forces, 2008
In what way do movements move? What do we mean by the movement of movements? While still a rather unconventional stance, I advance the argument that social movements are, at root, culture production agents. Regardless of whatever else they may accomplish, movements produce new cultural forms in the course of struggle; they often change and augment…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Memory, Social Action, Social Attitudes
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Offer, Shira; Schneider, Barbara – Social Forces, 2007
Using data from the 500 Family Study, this study examines how adolescents contribute to their families' social capital. An instrumental variable model reveals that adolescents' social involvement has a positive effect on social support from sources outside the family, suggesting that parents connect to other parents in the community through their…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Social Capital, Social Support Groups, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Sapolsky, Robert M. – Social Forces, 2006
Philosophers often consider what it is that makes individuals human. For biologists considering the same, the answer is often framed in the context of what are the key differences between humans and other animals. One vestige of human uniqueness still often cited by anthropologists is culture. However, this notion has been challenged in recent…
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Aggression, Animals, Primatology
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Ainsworth, James W. – Social Forces, 2002
Analysis of data from the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988, linked to neighborhood-level 1990 census data, indicates that neighborhood characteristics not only predict educational outcomes but also rival the strength of commonly cited family- and school-related predictors. Collective socialization was the strongest of proposed…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Aspiration, Disadvantaged Environment, Ghettos
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