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The Cumulative Effects of Colorism: Race, Wealth, and Skin Tone Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-03-14 Alexander Adames
Researchers have long documented a persistent Black–White gap in wealth. These studies, however, often treat race as a discrete category, eluding its socially constructed nature. As a result, these studies assume that the “effect of race” is consistent across all individuals racialized as Black. Studies that make this assumption potentially obscure heterogeneity in the size of the Black–White wealth
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State Nobility in the Field of International Criminal Justice: Divergent Elites and the Contest to Control Power over Capital Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-03-13 Mikkel Jarle Christensen
Criminal law was long considered as the sovereign domain of the state. However, after the end of the Cold War, states created new international criminal courts. These courts are part of a wider field of international criminal justice in which different elites work to develop, support, and critique legal ideas and practices that either complement or challenge the state. Inspired by Pierre Bourdieu’s
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Our Friends Keep Us Together: The Stability of Adolescents’ Cross-Race Friendships Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-03-04 Balint Neray, Molly Copeland, James Moody
Substantive racial integration depends on both access to cross-race friendship opportunities (demographic integration) and the development of stable and rewarding social relations (social integration). Yet, we know little about the relative stability of cross-race friendship nominations over time. Cross-race friendships are also experienced within social contexts, where other individual, dyadic, and
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Displaced Trust: Disrupting Legal Estrangement during Disaster Recovery Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-03-03 Jasmine Simington
Recent research on federal disaster aid distribution reveals stark racial and economic inequalities. Importantly, the very individuals and groups disadvantaged by FEMA funding—non-White, low-income households—are also the populations most likely to exhibit distrust toward the state. How does distrust shape the disaster recovery process in a low-income, rural, predominantly Black context? Using semi-structured
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School Shootings, Protests, and the Gun Culture in the United States Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-02-28 Susan Olzak
Scholars document that attitudes toward guns and gun policy reflect deeply entrenched cultures that overlap with ideological affiliations and party politics. Does exposure to dramatic events such as school shootings and protests regarding gun control affect these patterns? I explore two aspects of the gun culture: attitudes favoring (or rejecting) stricter gun policies and the number of memberships
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Parental Death Across the Life Course, Social Isolation, and Health in Later Life: Racial/Ethnic Disadvantage in the U.S. Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Rachel Donnelly, Zhiyong Lin, Debra Umberson
Bereavement is a risk factor for poor health, yet prior research has not considered how exposure to parental death across the life course may contribute to lasting social isolation and, in turn, poor health among older adults. Moreover, prior research often fails to consider the racial context of bereavement in the United States wherein Black and Hispanic Americans are much more likely than White Americans
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The Power Elite in the Welfare State 2012–2017: Stability and Change in the Key Institutional Orders of the Core of Power Networks in Denmark Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Christoph Houman Ellersgaard, Anton Grau Larsen
C. Wright Mills’ framework of power elites did not just address the power structure of post-World War II America. We propose a methodological framework to identify this group—by locating individuals sitting at the core of elite networks—arguing that the sector composition of this group reflects the relative importance of institutional orders within the limits of a nation-state. With two comprehensive
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Shared Identities and the Structure of Exchange Distinctly Shape Cooperation Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Ashley Harrell, Joseph M Quinn
People frequently engage in preferential treatment toward those with whom they share category memberships. At the same time, sociologists have long understood that the structure of ongoing relations shapes micro-level interactions. Here, we ask whether—and if so, how—same-identity bias in cooperation interacts with key structural features of exchange relations. Specifically, we use the affect theory
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The Differential Impacts of Contingent Employment on Fertility: Evidence from Australia Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-02-01 Mark Wooden, Trong-Anh Trinh, Irma Mooi-Reci
Many studies have reported evidence of negative associations between fixed-term contract employment and fertility. With few exceptions, these studies assume that employment status is exogenous and thus results are likely biased. Furthermore, previous research has mostly not considered whether the effects of employment status on fertility might vary with other worker characteristics. We draw on nineteen
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School, Studying, and Smarts: Gender Stereotypes and Education Across 80 Years of American Print Media, 1930–2009 Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-01-28 Andrei Boutyline, Alina Arseniev-Koehler, Devin J Cornell
In this article, we apply computational word embeddings to a 200-million-word corpus of American print media (1930–2009) to examine how education-relevant gender stereotypes changed as women’s educational attainment caught up with and eventually surpassed men’s. This case presents a rare opportunity to observe how cultural components of the gender system transform alongside the reversal of an important
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Child-Driven Parenting: Differential Early Childhood Investment by Offspring Genotype Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Asta Breinholt, Dalton Conley
A growing literature points to children’s influence on parents’ behavior, including parental investments in children. Further, previous research has shown differential parental response by socioeconomic status to children’s birth weight, cognitive ability, and school outcomes—all early life predictors of later socioeconomic success. This study considers an even earlier, more exogenous predictor of
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Community Violence and the Stability of Marriages and Cohabitations in Mexico Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Mónica L Caudillo, Jaein Lee
This study evaluates the link between local violence and the stability of women’s first co-residential unions in Mexico by exploiting the drastic increase in homicide rates caused by the Mexican War on Drugs in December 2006. We use event history analysis and individual union histories collected by a national survey in 2009 to assess whether increasing homicide rates in the previous 2 years relates
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How politics constrain the public’s understanding of terrorism Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-12-13 Murat Haner, Melissa M Sloan, Justin T Pickett, Francis T Cullen, Victoria O’Neill
Far-right domestic terrorism is a major threat to US national security. Despite this reality, conservative policymakers have downplayed the threat of right-wing violence while arguing that far-left violence (from groups like Antifa) is a more pressing concern. Drawing on attribution theory and research on politically motivated reasoning, we suggest that politics constrain the American public’s understanding
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Identification in Interaction: Racial Mirroring between Interviewers and Respondents Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-11-12 Robert E M Pickett, Aliya Saperstein, Andrew M Penner
Previous research has established that people shift their identities situationally and may come to subconsciously mirror one another. We explore this phenomenon among survey interviewers in the 2004-2018 General Social Survey by drawing on repeated measures of racial identification collected after each interview. We find not only that interviewers self-identify differently over time but also that their
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Identificational Orientations among Three Generations of Migrants in France Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-11-10 Ewurama A Okai, Julia A Behrman
Scholarship on migrant identity increasingly shows that migrants can—and often do—construct multifaceted identities. Yet, questions around migrant identity formation remain contested in France, given a strongly assimilationist policy context that (in theory) precludes multiple identification. This paper explores intergenerational patterns of migrant identification in France using a nationally representative
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Who are the “Immigrants”?: How Whites’ Diverse Perceptions of Immigrants Shape Their Attitudes Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-10-06 René D Flores, Ariel Azar
Past scholars find that there is a public consensus in the United States on the traits of ideal immigrants. Nevertheless, is there also a consensus on the perceived traits of actual immigrants living in the country? Further, are these perceptions attitudinally consequential? We find no consensus among whites on the composition of the immigrant population in the United States. Further, the immigrant
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A Gendered and Racialized Educational Hierarchy: Disparities in Elementary School Teachers’ Perceptions of Student Behavior Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-09-01 Jaymes Pyne, Michela Musto
This paper uses an intersectional framework to account for the degree to which race, when intersecting gender, relates to teachers’ evaluations of US elementary school children over time. Drawing on longitudinal data from the 2011 Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Kindergarten cohort, we employ growth curve modeling to study descriptive trends in teacher perceptions of student behavior from kindergarten
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From Secrecy to Public Containment: The Role of Hybrid Spaces in the Governance of Nuclear Crises in France Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-08-30 Valerie Arnhold
How do some large-scale adverse events receive major media coverage and become crises for public actors while others are treated as routine events? This article reinvestigates this question based on a case study of the media treatment in France of the Chernobyl and Fukushima nuclear accidents. Drawing on an original set of media data and an ethnographic study, the article shows how both accidents were
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The Geography of Gentrification and Residential Mobility Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-08-29 Hyojung Lee, Kristin L Perkins
Gentrification research often starts with the hypothesis that gentrification causes displacement of a neighborhood’s original residents, particularly low-income and vulnerable residents. Recent research based on large-scale quantitative data suggests that the displacement effects of gentrification for low-income residents evident from case studies and qualitative data are modest at the macroscale.
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“I’m Not a Conspiracy Theorist, But…”: Knowledge and Conservative Politics in Unsettled Times Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-08-08 Jennifer Carlson, Elliot Ramo
How does conspiracist thinking become appealing to its adherents, and with what political consequences? Drawing on fifty in-depth interviews with gun sellers from April 2020 to August 2020, this paper examines conspiracist thinking among US conservatives. We present a sociological account that follows historian Richard Hofstadter’s early account in theorizing conspiracist thinking as a “style” of politics
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Differentiated Egalitarianism: The Impact of Paid Family Leave Policy on Women’s and Men’s Paid and Unpaid Work Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-08-08 Pilar Gonalons-Pons
The birth of a new child continues to exacerbate gender specialization among different-sex couples. This study considers the potential of paid leave policies to intervene in this key life-course juncture and promote greater gender equality in paid and unpaid work. While previous research has examined the impact of paid leave policies on paid or unpaid work among mothers or fathers separately, this
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The Demographics of School District Secession Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Alexandra Cooperstock
School segregation has been a topic of significant sociological research in the United States. Less attention has been devoted to understanding the relationship between school district inequalities and secession, a political tool that forms new boundaries after a formal withdrawal from an existing school district. This paper analyzes the school district secession attempts that have occurred since the
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The Topography of Subnational Inequality Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Tom VanHeuvelen
In this study, I examine inequality divergence, or the inequality of inequalities across local labor markets. While divergence trends of central tendencies such as per capita income have been well documented, less is known about the descriptive trends or contributing mechanisms for inequality itself. In this study, I construct wage inequality measures in 722 commuting zones covering the entire contiguous
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Opposition Avoidance or Mutual Engagement? The Interdependent Dynamics between Opposing Transnational LGBT+ Networks Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-07-07 Kristopher Velasco
Embeddedness within transnational networks influences how countries govern LGBT+ communities. Research commonly highlights how pro-LGBT+ networks enable the expansion of rights; however, increased transnational coordination between anti-LGBT+ actors means network embeddedness also leads to policy backlash. Therefore, an important question to ask is: why are countries differentially embedded within
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Gender Inequality in Lifetime Earnings Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-06-24 Juliana de Castro Galvao
Although vast, most research on gender earnings gaps uses cross-sectional data for year-round full-time workers; therefore, little is known about the dynamics of gender inequality in lifetime earnings. To address this lacuna, this article analyzes data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics from 1968 to 2017, to investigate the extent, trends and explanations of gender inequality in lifetime earnings
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Paws on the Street: Neighborhood-Level Concentration of Households with Dogs and Urban Crime Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-06-24 Nicolo P Pinchak, Christopher R Browning, Bethany Boettner, Catherine A Calder, Jake Tarrence
The formative work of Jane Jacobs underscores the combination of “eyes on the street” and trust between residents in deterring crime. Nevertheless, little research has assessed the effects of residential street monitoring on crime due partly to a lack of data measuring this process. We argue that neighborhood-level rates of households with dogs captures part of the residential street monitoring process
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Undocumented Again? DACA Rescission, Emotions, and Incorporation Outcomes among Young Adults Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Elizabeth Aranda, Elizabeth Vaquera, Heide Castañeda, Girsea Martinez Rosas
Former President Trump’s election and subsequent anti-immigrant policy initiatives brought an unprecedented sense of uncertainty for undocumented immigrants. This is particularly true for those who had experienced expanding opportunities through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) executive action signed by former President Obama in 2012. We use in-depth interviews with undocumented young
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Review of Managing Medical Authority: How Doctors Compete for Status and Create Knowledge Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-28 Lauren D Olsen
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Review of: How the Other Half Eats: The Untold Story of Food and Inequality in America Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-26 Joslyn Brenton
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Adoption of LGBT-Inclusive Policies: Social Construction, Coercion, or Competition? Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-23 Naomi A Gardberg,William Newburry,Bryant A Hudson,Magdalena Viktora-Jones
Abstract Companies evaluate LGBT policy adoption in an environment with competing and often contradictory societal institutions and ethical frames. This makes the adoption process more difficult to understand when compared to new practice diffusion in less contested settings, providing an opportunity to examine diffusion in an uncertain and varying institutional environment. Herein, we develop a policy
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Review of Foucault’s New Materialism: A Review of Thomas Lemke’s The Government of Things Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Mark Olssen
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Embedded Distress: Social Integration, Gender, and Adolescent Depression Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-16 Molly Copeland
In adolescence, teens manage close friendships while simultaneously evaluating their social position in the larger peer context. Conceptualizing distinct local and global network structures clarifies how social integration relates to mental wellbeing. Examining local cohesion and global embeddedness in the context of key factors related to mental health, such as gender and friends’ depression, can
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Correction to: Review of Redistributing the Poor: Jails, Hospitals, and the Crisis of Law and Fiscal Austerity Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Nicole P Marwell
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Ideology, Legitimation and Collective Action: Evidence from Chile on the Mechanism of Ideological Inversion Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-03 Ismael Puga,Cristóbal Moya
Abstract We present evidence on a social mechanism of legitimation—ideological inversion—proposing that a fantasy consensus deters collective actions oriented toward social change, even in contexts were individuals support transformations. This fantasy consensus emerges as individuals infer the order’s validity mainly from the practices of others, which are largely constrained by social structures
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Review of Pink Hats and Ballots: An Ecofeminist Analysis of Women’s Political Analysis in the Age of Trump, Coronavirus, and Black Lives Matter Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-03 Phoebe Godfrey
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The Counteracting Nature of Contextual Influences: Peer Effects and Offsetting Mechanisms in Schools Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Nicolai T Borgen,Solveig T Borgen,Gunn Elisabeth Birkelund
Abstract There is currently a mismatch between the theoretical expectations of peer effects held by many scholars and the quantitative empirical literature. This paper contributes to the understanding of peer effects by highlighting the oft-overlooked conceptual distinction between social influences and a well-defined causal effect; peers may influence one another via several potentially contradicting
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Review of Living on the Edge: When Hard Times Become a Way of Life Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Lindsey Ibañez
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Review of “The Arab Spring Abroad: Diaspora Activism against Authoritarian Regimes” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Gözde Böcü
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Review of “Agents of Reform: Child Labor and the Origins of the Welfare State” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Alexander F Roehrkasse
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Mother–Father Parity in Work–Family Conflict? The Importance of Selection Effects and Nonresponse Bias Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-21 Marisa Young,Melissa A Milkie,Scott Schieman
Abstract Do mothers experience worse work–family conflicts compared with fathers? Yes, according to trenchant and influential qualitative studies that illuminate mothers’ deeply felt problems from work demands that intrude into family life. No, suggest studies employing representative samples of employed parents that show mothers’ and fathers’ have similar work-to-family conflict. We assess these paradoxical
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Trapped in a Maze: How Social Control Institutions Drive Family Poverty and Inequality Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-21 Frank Edwards
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Subjective Well-Being Scarring Through Unemployment: New Evidence from a Long-Running Panel Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Andreas Eberl,Matthias Collischon,Tobias Wolbring
Abstract Scarring effects of unemployment on subjective well-being (SWB), i.e., negative effects that remain even after workers reenter employment, are well documented in the literature. Nevertheless, the theoretical mechanisms by which unemployment leads to long-lasting negative consequences for SWB are still under debate. Thus, we theorize that unemployment can have an enduring impact mainly through
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Review of Mapping the Transnational World: How We Move and Communicate across Borders and Why It Matters Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-15 Tahseen Shams
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Review of Carceral Con: The Deceptive Terrain of Criminal Justice Reform Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Randall Shelden
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Review of Erich Fromm and Global Public Sociology Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Lauren Langman
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Review of After Lockdown:A Metamorphosis Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Jeffrey Stepnisky
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Corrigendum to: Work Primacy and the Social Incorporation of Unaccompanied, Undocumented Latinx Youth in the United States Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-28 Stephanie L Canizales
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The Challenge of Seeing Beyond our Differences: A Review of “Inventing the Ties that Bind: Imagined Relationships in Moral and Political Life” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Small M.
The Challenge of Seeing Beyond our Differences: A Review of “Inventing the Ties that Bind: Imagined Relationships in Moral and Political Life” By Francesca Polletta University of Chicago Press, 2020, 272. pages. https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/I/bo60081321.html
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Review of Movements and Parties: Critical Connections in American Political Development Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Suh D.
Review of Movements and Parties: Critical Connections in American Political Development By Sidney Tarrow Cambridge University Press, 2021. 288 pages. https://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/politics-international-relations/american-government-politics-and-policy/movements-and-parties-critical-connections-american-political-development?format=PB&isbn=9781009013963
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Review of Redistributing the Poor: Jails, Hospitals, and the Crisis of Law and Fiscal Austerity Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-19
By Armanda Lara-Millán, Oxford University Press. 2021, 256 pages. https://global.oup.com/academic/product/redistributing-the-poor-9780197507902?cc=us&lang=en&
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Review of “Social Capital in Singapore: The Power of Network Diversity” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-15 Joonmo Son
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Review of Sociology of Waiting: How Americans Wait Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-15 Claudia Maria López
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Review of “Labor in the Age of Finance: Pensions, Politics, and Corporations from Deindustrialization to Dodd-Frank” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-12 Jake Rosenfeld
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Review of Getting Something to Eat in Jackson: Race, Class and Food in the American South Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-12 Joshua Sbicca
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Erratum to: How Internal Hiring Affects Occupational Stratification Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Wilmers N, Kimball W.
In the originally published version of this manuscript, there were errors in some tables and the supplementary appendix. A line of data was duplicated in Table 2, standard errors were omitted from a line in Table 3, and the wrong supplementary file was uploaded in place of the appendix. These errors have been corrected. The publisher apologizes for these errors.
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Examining the Effects of a Universal Cash Transfer on Fertility Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-08 Sarah K Cowan, Kiara Wyndham Douds
Childbearing is at once deeply personal and shaped by social structure. It is also a site of profound inequality in the United States. Income inequality is an upstream cause of childbearing inequality, yet the evidence of the effect of income on reproduction is inconclusive. Previously, scholars primarily examined the introduction of means-tested relief to families with children. This limits analysis
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Review of “Gaslighted: How the Oil and Gas Industry Shortchanges Women Scientists” Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Luhr S.
Review of “Gaslighted: How the Oil and Gas Industry Shortchanges Women Scientists” By Christine L. Williams University of California Press2021; 262 pages. https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520385283/gaslighted
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Correction to: Patterns of Perceived Hostility and Identity Concealment among Self-Identified Atheists Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Jacqui Frost,Christopher P Scheitle,Elaine Howard Ecklund
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Review of American Ideas of Equality: A Social History, 1750–2020 Social Forces (IF 5.866) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Redding K.
Bankston IIICarl LAmherst, NY, Cambria Press: 2021, 324 pages https://www.cambriapress.com/pub.cfm?bid=792