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社会学·国际顶刊
Social Forces
的最新目录及摘要~
Social Forces 创刊于1922年,是国际社会科学界公认的顶尖刊物。该期刊关注社会学前沿领域的研究,并涉及社会学和心理学、人类学、政治学、历史学、经济学等学科的交叉领域。Social Forces由牛津大学出版社(Oxford University Press)和北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校社会学系(the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)合作出版。
Social Forces 为季刊,每年发布4期,最新一期(Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024)有以下11个栏目:
STRATIFICATION AND INEQUALITY
ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
RACE AND MENTAL HEALTH
GENDER
IMMIGRATION
BIOSOCIAL
NETWORKS
POPULAR CULTURE
DISABILITIES
CORRECTIONS
BOOK REVIEWS
共计31篇文章,详情如下。
Social Forces
原版目录
STRATIFICATION AND INEQUALITY
Cohort-Specific Experiences of Industrial Decline and Intergenerational Income Mobility
Nathan Seltzer
The United States manufacturing industry has long been regarded as the economic engine that built and sustained the middle class. In recent decades, this pillar of economic opportunity has eroded substantially. Though much has been written about the decline of manufacturing sectors in United States communities, the potential consequences for economic mobility, and stratification processes more generally, remain largely unexplored. In this study, I develop a conceptual framework linking the study of labor market change to economic stratification. I examine how structural changes to United States labor markets have altered opportunities for economic advancement in the United States. I focus the analysis on birth cohorts in the 1980s, whose labor market entry spans the large-scale erosion of the manufacturing industry in the 2000s. I find strong evidence that declines in manufacturing employment have contributed to growing geographic disparities in upward intergenerational income mobility. Children raised in counties that experienced large contractions in manufacturing industries throughout adolescence experienced large economic penalties in adulthood via reduced levels of upward mobility. The results demonstrate how long-term macroeconomic changes can disrupt and redistribute opportunities within societies.
Fiscal Impoverishment in Rich Democracies
Manuel Schechtl and Rourke L O’Brien
This article introduces fiscal impoverishment as a framework for comparative poverty research. We invert standard analyses of welfare state policy and household poverty by focusing not on poverty alleviation but poverty creation and exacerbation. Using harmonized household survey data, we show how the income and payroll taxes most rich countries rely on to finance the public sector serve to push households (further) into poverty. We estimate that across rich democracies on average about one in four households in poverty are made poorer on net after taxes and transfers; with fiscal impoverishment levels ranging from <10% in some countries to more than 70% in others, revealing extreme cross-national variation in how the pocketbooks of poor households are impacted by national tax and transfer policy. We go on to show that fiscal impoverishment does not track with standard measures of welfare state generosity but is instead largely determined by design of income tax systems, particularly a country’s relative reliance on (regressive) payroll taxes versus (progressive) income taxes. We consider the implications of fiscal impoverishment for assessing welfare state performance and for comparative poverty research.
Double (Dis)Advantage: The Cumulative Role of Parental Resources and the Institutional Context in Intergenerational Time and Money Transfers
Ariane Bertogg and Diana Roxana Galos
This study addresses an underexplored mechanism of social inequality transmission, namely, intergenerational transfers from older parents to their adult children in terms of (i) money and (ii) time (specifically, devoted to sporadic or regular childcare). A yet unaddressed question in the literature is whether these two resources are transferred in a cumulative (i.e., both resources being transferred) or compensatory (i.e., only one resource being transferred) manner and how such cumulation or compensation depends on parental income and the wider institutional context. Filling this lacuna, this study investigates whether grandparents who have fewer financial resources compensate for their lack of opportunities to provide financial transfers to their adult children by transferring more time to their children, or whether higher-income parents are more likely to transfer both more time and money than lower-income parents, resulting in greater advantage among their receiving children (cumulation). Drawing on six waves of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, this study analyzes transfers from more than 53,000 grandparents aged 50 or older to their adult children across European countries. The findings show that higher-income parents, relative to lower-income parents, are more likely to provide both time (more precisely, sporadic childcare) and financial support to their adult children, yielding evidence for the cumulation of transfers. Further, evidence of a double (dis)advantage emerges, as social gradients in (financial and regular time) transfers are more pronounced in contexts with smaller public expenditures on formal childcare and a more unequal distribution of household incomes.
Parental Schooling, Educational Attainment, Skills, and Earnings: A Trend Analysis across Fifteen Countries
Nicola Pensiero and Carlo Barone
Using data on fifteen countries based on the harmonization of IALS and PIAC data, we provide a cross-national analysis of the evolution of the role of educational attainment and cognitive skills as mediators of intergenerational inequalities between 1994 and 2015. We find that the association between parents’ education and children’s earnings is large and highly stable over time in most countries, except for Scandinavian countries, where we detect a downward trend. Conversely, the United States stands out as the country displaying the largest earning differentials by parents’ education and as the only country where these differentials increased over time. We demonstrate that educational attainment and skills contributed in different ways to the persistence of these intergenerational inequalities. On the one hand, educational equalization was compensated by increasing earning returns to education in several countries. On the other hand, the association between parents’ education and cognitive skills, as well as the related earning returns, stayed largely unchanged across these two decades.
How Political Dynasties Concentrate Advantage within Cities: Evidence from Crime and City Services in Chicago
Stephanie Ternullo, Ángela Zorro-Medina, Robert Vargas
Classic models of urban inequality acknowledge the importance of politics for resource distribution and service provision. Yet, contemporary studies of spatial inequality rarely measure politics directly. In this paper, we introduce political dynasties as a way of integrating political economy approaches with ecological theory to better understand the political construction of urban spatial inequality. To do so, we examine the case of political dynasties within the Chicago city council. We show that, from 2011 to 2018, blocks in dynastic wards saw fewer homicides, assaults, robberies, and thefts relative to those in non-dynastic wards. We then leverage the 2015 ward redistricting to provide evidence that dynastic effects play some role in producing these outcomes: blocks annexed into dynastic wards experienced a decline in assaults and robberies and an increase in pothole coverings. While dynastic politicians improve outcomes for blocks they annex, they also withdraw power from those they displace; and displaced blocks had relatively higher levels of crime than annexed blocks in 2015. Taken together, our findings provide evidence that dynastic politicians are contributing to spatial inequalities within Chicago.
ECONOMIC SOCIOLOGY
Skill Specificity on High-Skill Online Gig Platforms: Same as in Traditional Labour Markets?
Jaap van Slageren and Andrea M Herrmann
Political economists and labour sociologists alike have studied how the skill specificity of workers can be explained, as it significantly affects workers’ performance. However, the emergence of the gig economy may substantially change skill hiring and specificity in online labour markets because gig workers do not need formal educational credentials to offer their services. Instead, skills are “unbundled” from occupations, and platforms provide alternative ways to signal competencies, for example, via their rating and review systems. To shed light on the applicability of existing theories to explain the skill profiles of gig workers, we examine what predicts the skills hired in the online gig economy. Based on multilevel ordinal logistic regression analyses of 2336 gig worker profiles, we show that—as in traditional labour markets—gig workers with a vocational degree and longer online work experience are hired for more specific skills. However, national labour market institutions and educational systems affect the gig workers’ skill specificity in the opposite direction than in traditional labour markets. Our findings thus suggest that online gig platforms allow workers to overcome restrictions imposed by national institutions as they are hired for those skills in the online gig economy that are institutionally less facilitated in their home labour markets.
Volunteering in the Creation of Entrepreneurship
Dali Ma and Cheng Wang
We propose that volunteering increases the likelihood of self-employment among young adults because volunteering improves self-esteem, which helps prospective entrepreneurs cope with the challenges associated with self-employment. We further predict that young adults who participate in diverse voluntary organizations are particularly likely to undertake self-employment because affiliations with diverse organizations not only enhance the social-psychological benefits of self-employment but also buffer the potential loss of a source of self-esteem caused by the discontinuation of a voluntary organization. Analysis of the data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (N = 35,228) supports our hypotheses. Our study highlights that a better-developed self through volunteering benefits the agentic action of entrepreneurship.
Social Capital and Cultural Producers’ Copyright Ownership of Their Creations: Evidence from the Television Industry 1956–1996
Erez Aharon Marantz
This paper explores how social capital and property regulations shape cultural producers’ ability to own copyrights for the products they create. Because individual producers lack the resources required to develop and distribute their creations, they partner with large firms who demand the copyrights for products they invest in. I argue two types of social capital—status and partner substitutability—enable producers to own their creations by increasing their bargaining power over the firms they partner with. Moreover, I propose that different types of property regulations condition whether status or partner substitutability have a stronger role in producers’ ownership outcomes. Analyzing all shows made for American television from 1956 to 1996, I show that increases in showrunners’ status and number of broadcasters they collaborated with increased the probability they owned shows they produced. However, the effects of these social capitals were contingent on the property regulations showrunners operated under. These findings advance our understanding of the allocation of copyrights, the power dynamics between creators and firms, and the effects of social capital in cultural industries.
They didn’t have to pay me because I signed the contract. But is that right? I found out that these people were streaming my work, and they never had to ask me…They stole that from me. They just took it! (Dave Chappelle, The Unforgiven, 2021).
RACE AND MENTAL HEALTH
Mental Health across the Early Life Course at the Intersection of Race, Skin Tone, and School Racial Context
Taylor W Hargrove
Prior research documents higher levels of depressive symptoms among Black Americans relative to Whites. Yet, we know less about the role of other dimensions of stratification (e.g., skin tone) in shaping mental health inequality between Black and White adults, and whether mental health trajectories by race and skin tone among Black adults are contingent upon social contexts in childhood and adolescence. To address these gaps, this study asks: (1) to what extent do self-identified race and interviewer-rated skin tone among Black respondents shape inequalities in depressive symptoms between Black and White Americans across ages 12–42? (2) Are trajectories of depressive symptoms by race and skin tone among Black respondents contingent on school racial contexts (e.g., school racial composition)? Using five waves of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health and growth curve models, results suggest trajectories of depressive symptoms across ages 12–42 vary by race, school racial context, and skin tone among Black respondents. Specifically, Black students rated as having very dark, dark, and medium brown skin who attended high proportion Black schools in adolescence experienced lower levels of depressive symptoms than their White and light-skinned Black counterparts, particularly across the teen years and early 20s. Conversely, attending higher proportion White schools led to increases in depressive symptoms across earlier ages for Black students, particularly those who fell within the middle of the skin color continuum. Findings highlight competing advantages and disadvantages of navigating racialized spaces in childhood/adolescence for Black Americans of different skin tones.
Beyond Empathy: Familial Incarceration, Stress Proliferation, and Depressive Symptoms Among African Americans
Nicholas C Smith and Max E Coleman
Women tend to be more vulnerable to the adverse psychological effects of “network events” (stressors that occur to loved ones). The cost-of-caring hypothesis is regarded as the primary mechanism for this vulnerability and posits that women’s relatively high level of emotional involvement in the lives of network members causes women to experience greater empathetic reactions when loved ones encounter stressors. Drawing on the stress process model, gender theory, and research on the collateral consequences of incarceration, we theorize stress proliferation, the process by which an initial stressor induces secondary stressors, as an additional mechanism and empirically test our theoretical propositions using the case of African Americans with an incarcerated family member. Using data from the National Survey of American Life, we ask: are African American women more vulnerable to the depressive effects of familial incarceration compared to African American men? If so, to what extent might African American women’s heightened vulnerability be explained by their greater susceptibility to stress proliferation? Results suggest that familial incarceration is associated with greater chronic strains, financial strain, and family conflict only among African American women. Further, the magnitude of the association between familial incarceration and depressive symptoms is significantly larger among African American women; however, after adjusting for stress proliferation variables, the gender difference in vulnerability attenuates and becomes statistically nonsignificant. We conclude that the emotional cost of caring may be compounded by social and economic costs of caregiving, heightening women’s vulnerability to depression following disruptive network events.
GENDER
Opportunity or Exploitation? A Longitudinal Dyadic Analysis of Flexible Working Arrangements and Gender Household Labor Inequality
Senhu Wang and Cheng Cheng
It has been extensively debated over whether the rise of flexible working arrangements (FWAs) may be an “opportunity” for a more egalitarian gender division of household labor or reinforce the “exploitation” of women in the traditional gender division. Drawing on a linked-lives perspective, this study contributes to the literature by using longitudinal couple-level dyadic data in the UK (2010–2020) to examine how couple-level arrangements of flexible working affect within-couple inequality in time and different types of household labor. The results show that among heterosexual couples, women’s use of FWAs significantly intensifies their disproportionate share of housework and maintains their heavy childcare burden regardless of whether their husbands use FWAs. In contrast, men’s use of FWAs does not change the unequal gendered division of housework and childcare, even when their wives do not use any FWAs. These patterns of intensified gender inequalities are more pronounced in routine housework tasks (e.g., cooking, washing, and cleaning), and among the reduced hours and teleworking arrangements. Overall, rather than providing an “opportunity” for a more egalitarian division of household labor, the use of FWAs maintains or even exacerbates the “exploitation” of women under the existing traditional gender norms.
Assessing Admiration for Women Who Do “Men’s Work”
Isabel Pike, Rachael S Pierotti, Mame Soukeye Mbaye
Drawing on interviews and focus groups from Conakry, the capital city of the Republic of Guinea in West Africa, this article examines how people talk about women working in male-dominated skilled trades alongside women’s accounts of their work experiences in those sectors. We find that the idea of women doing gender atypical work, whom we call “crossovers,” evokes widespread admiration. They are unanimously described as brave and virtuous, contrasted with women who rely on money from relationships with men. However, this celebration falters in the workplace, where crossovers often experience paternalism and harassment. Building on theories of both gender beliefs and femininities, we attribute this discrepancy to the differential threats to the gender order that are posed by accommodating crossovers at work versus speaking positively about them. Working together requires men to confront actual women’s unexpected capabilities, while rhetorically celebrating crossovers may in fact reify stereotypes about most women and fail to fundamentally undermine men’s authority. Crossovers can serve as sources of inspiration for an alternative gender order, but we find that professed admiration for “exceptional” groups of women has both limitations and risks. We conclude by suggesting that the subversive potential of admiration for gender atypical behavior must be empirically examined, rather than assumed, with attention to why such women are seen as admirable as well as how this admiration is borne out in social interactions.
IMMIGRATION
Hispanic Men’s Earnings Mobility Across Immigrant Generations: Estimates Using Tax Records
Andrés Villarreal and Christopher R Tamborini
Whether immigrants and their descendants are catching up socioeconomically with the rest of society is a fundamental question in the study of immigrant assimilation. In this paper, we examine the progress that Hispanic immigrant men make catching up with the earnings of later-generation Whites across generations. We rely on data from multiple years of the Current Population Survey linked with individuals’ tax earnings. This unique dataset allows us to overcome some important limitations of previous studies that employ a synthetic generation approach in which individuals born approximately one generation earlier are used as proxies for actual parents. Our matching strategy also enables us to identify the exact third generation and evaluate the contribution of ethnic attrition to estimates of intergenerational mobility. Second-generation Hispanic men are found to experience lower mobility than later-generation Whites for most values of parental earnings. However, their lower mobility can be explained by their immigrant parents’ lower education levels. In contrast, third-generation Hispanic men experience lower mobility even after accounting for parental education and ethnic attrition. This finding is consistent with a stalling or reversal in the socioeconomic progress of Hispanics beyond the second generation.
Contexts of Contestation: How Competing Logics of the State Enable and Constrain Immigrant Civic and Political Participation
Austin Hoang-Nam Vo
Immigrants face substantial barriers to civic and political participation, but many nonetheless remain highly engaged. This study examines this tension by developing and applying a framework for analyzing how state policies both integrate immigrants and enforce immigration to shape participation. I find that states (1) differ in their adoption and implementation of federal immigration policy and (2) pass inclusive and exclusive legislation in cross-cutting ways, which together (3) shape group differences in immigrant engagement along race-ethnicity and citizenship. Immigrant participation is examined using multilevel data that combine individual-level characteristics with state policy and implementation measures. Models show that inclusionary public benefits policy bolsters participation and exclusionary law enforcement policy reduces participation. However, these policy effects are shown to attenuate each other in asymmetric ways. The bolstering effect of inclusionary policy is sensitive to and rendered statistically nonsignificant by exclusionary policy, but the reverse is not true. I conclude with a discussion on the implications of these results for research on civic inequality along race-ethnicity and citizenship.
NETWORKS
The Asymmetry of Embeddedness: Illegal Trade Networks and Drug Purchasing Diversity on an Online Illegal Drug Market
Scott W Duxbury and Dana L Haynie
While economic sociology research and theory argue that excessive network embeddedness depresses competition in illegal markets, prior research does not examine how distinct types of embeddedness may have asymmetric effects on the diversity of purchasing behavior—the range of illegal goods that buyers typically purchase. This study considers how network embeddedness can positively or negatively affect drug purchasing diversity in online drug markets by referring buyers to new vendors or “locking” buyers into recurrent trade for the same products. We analyze novel network data on 16,847 illegal drug exchanges between 7205 actors on one online illegal drug market. Consistent with hypothesized network asymmetry, buyers are more likely to purchase a new type of drug when the transaction is part of an indirect network referral. Although histories of exchange increase the overall frequency of drug purchasing, they are associated with decreases in new drug-type purchases. In the aggregate, these processes either contribute to an integrated market where buyers purchase multiple drugs from multiple vendors (in the case of referrals) or a fragmented market characterized by recurrent trade from the same vendors for the same substances (in the case of repeated trade). We discuss the implications of these findings for research on embeddedness, illegal markets, risky exchange, and drug policy.
BIOSOCIAL
Exploring the Fetal Origins Hypothesis Using Genetic Data
Sam Trejo
Birth weight is a robust predictor of valued life course outcomes, emphasizing the importance of prenatal development. But does birth weight act as a proxy for environmental conditions in utero, or do biological processes surrounding birth weight themselves play a role in healthy development? To answer this question, we leverage variation in birth weight that is, within families, orthogonal to prenatal environmental conditions: one’s genes. We construct polygenic scores in two longitudinal studies (Born in Bradford, N = 2008; Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, N = 8488) to empirically explore the molecular genetic correlates of birth weight. A 1 standard deviation increase in the polygenic score is associated with an ~100-grams increase in birth weight and a 1.4 pp (22 percent) decrease in low birth weight probability. Sibling comparisons illustrate that this association largely represents a causal effect. The polygenic score–birth weight association is increased for children who spend longer in the womb and whose mothers have higher body mass index, though we find no differences across maternal socioeconomic status. Finally, the polygenic score affects social and cognitive outcomes, suggesting that birth weight is itself related to healthy prenatal development.
POPULAR CULTURE
Coming of Age on the Margins: A Life Course Perspective on the Time Use of Australian Adolescents with Disabilities
Craig M Rawlings and Clayton Childress
Recent research suggests that political polarization has spilled over into otherwise mundane areas of social life. And yet, the size, shape, and depth of that spillage into popular culture are generally unknown. Relying on a sample of 135 widely known movies, TV shows, musicians, sports, and leisure activities, we investigate these issues. We find the “oil spill” of polarization into popular culture is large but loosely organized into multiple fairly shallow pools. Cultural polarization is also asymmetric. Liberals like a wide variety of popular culture, do not dislike conservative popular culture, and their tastes are more rooted in their sociodemographics. Conservatives, on the other hand, like a much narrower range of popular culture, dislike the culture created and liked by Black and urban liberals, and their tastes seem to be more directly rooted in their political ideology. Potential implications of an asymmetric culture war, and ideas for future research, are discussed.
DISABILITIES
Exploring the Fetal Origins Hypothesis Using Genetic Data
Martin O’Flaherty, Tania King, Anne Kavanagh
People with disabilities experience persistent, multifaceted disadvantage across the life course. The origins of life course disadvantage among people with disabilities may stem, in part, from exclusion during developmentally sensitive periods in childhood. Time use among adolescents represents a potentially important mechanism implicated in the emergence of disability-related disadvantage, but previous research has largely neglected the time use of school age adolescents with disabilities. Utilizing nationally representative time diary data, this study investigated disability-related differences in adolescents’ time use, and how these gaps vary by sex and age. Results indicated that disability-related differences in time use are widespread and substantial in magnitude. Adolescents with disabilities spend more time in screen-based leisure, alone, and with mothers, and less time in educational activities than non-disabled adolescents. Boys with disabilities additionally spend less time in structured leisure and with peers than non-disabled boys. Differences in time alone, with peers, and in screen-based leisure increase in magnitude at older ages. We conclude that differential time use in adolescence may contribute to multiple persistent disadvantages experienced by people with disabilities over the life course.
CORRECTIONS
Correction to: Exacerbating inequality over the life-course: examining race differences in the reciprocal effects between incarceration and income
https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad152
Correction to review: Race After Technology Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code
https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae017
BOOK REVIEWS
Review of “Political Masculinity: How Incels, Fundamentalists and Authoritarians Mobilise for Patriarchy”
Rina James
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e1, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soac152
Review of “Moving the Needle: What Tight Labor Markets Do for the Poor”
Brian Thiede
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e2, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad143
Review of “Medical Legal Violence: Health Care and Immigration Enforcement Against Latinx Noncitizens”
Anthony M Jimenez
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e3, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad154
Review of “Capitalist Outsiders: Oil’s Legacies in Mexico and Venezuela”
Eduardo Silva
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e4, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad155
Review of “Addiction recovery and resilience: faith-based health services in an African American community”
Daniel Bolger
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e5, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad156
Review of “Late Modernity in Crisis: Why We Need a Theory of Society”
John A Hall
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e6, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae001
Review of “We Thought It Would Be Heaven: Refugees in an Unequal America”
Andrea Voyer
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e7, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae002
Review of “The Rise of the Masses: Spontaneous Mobilization and Contentious Politics”
Catherine Corrigall-Brown
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e8, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae003
Review of “Words and Distinctions for the Common Good: Practical Reason in the Logic of Social Science”
Michael J Carter
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e9, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae004
Review of “An Ugly Word: Rethinking Race in Italy and the United States”
Jean Beaman
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e10, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae005
Review of “In Too Deep: Class and Mothering in a Flooded Community”
Lori Peek
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e11, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae006
Review of “Engage and Evade: How Latino Immigrant Families Manage Surveillance in Everyday Life”
Stephanie L Canizales
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e12, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae007
Review of “Soaking the Middle Class: Suburban Inequality and Recovery from Disaster”
Anna Rhodes and Max Besbris
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e13, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae008
Review of “Interracial Romance and Health: Bridging Generations, Race Relations, and Well-Being by Byron Miller”
Nicholas H Wolfinger
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e14, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae009
Review of “The Slow Violence of Immigration Court: Procedural Justice on Trial”
Cecilia Menjívar and Marina Lopez
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e15, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae010
Review of “Revolution of Things: The Islamism and Post-Islamism of Objects in Tehran”
Neema Noori
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e16, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae011
Review of “Nursing the Spirit: Care, Public Life, and the Dignity of Vulnerable Strangers”
Fumilayo Showers
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e17, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae012
Review of “The New Power Elite”
Aaron Reeves
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e18, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae013
Review of “Urban Specters: The Everyday Harms of Racial Capitalism”
Davon Norris
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e19, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae014
Review of “The impact of college diversity: struggles and successes at age 30”
Blake R Silver
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e20, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae015
Review of “Failing Forward: The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Conservation”
Robert Fletcher
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e21, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae016
Review of “Anonymous: The Performance of Hidden Identities”
Iddo Tavory
Social Forces, Volume 102, Issue 4, June 2024, Page e22, https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soae020
以上就是本期 JCS Focus 的全部内容啦!
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JCS
《中国社会学学刊》(The Journal of Chinese Sociology)于2014年10月由中国社会科学院社会学研究所创办。作为中国大陆第一本英文社会学学术期刊,JCS致力于为中国社会学者与国外同行的学术交流和合作打造国际一流的学术平台。JCS由全球最大科技期刊出版集团施普林格·自然(Springer Nature)出版发行,由国内外顶尖社会学家组成强大编委会队伍,采用双向匿名评审方式和“开放获取”(open access)出版模式。JCS已于2021年5月被ESCI收录。2022年,JCS的CiteScore分值为2.0(Q2),在社科类别的262种期刊中排名第94位,位列同类期刊前36%。2023年,JCS在科睿唯安发布的2023年度《期刊引证报告》(JCR)中首次获得影响因子并达到1.5(Q3)。
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