网易首页 > 网易号 > 正文 申请入驻

JCS Focus | Sociological Research Online最新目录与摘要

0
分享至

The Journal of Chinese Sociology

welcome to subscribe !!!

本周JCS Focus

将继续为大家推送

社会学·国际顶刊

Sociological Research Online

最新目录与摘要

期刊简介

SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ONLINE

Sociological Research Online(简称SRO)是经同行评审的国际期刊,旨在促进社会学研究者之间迅速展开不限制主题和方法的交流。该期刊发表高质量的应用社会学研究,重点关注理论、实证和方法的讨论,也会涉及对当前政治、文化和思想议题的辩论。SRO发表的文章将社会学分析方法应用于公众和个人关切的问题,展现了社会学研究和理论所具有的广泛的社会相关性及其对理解当代社会问题的重要意义。

Sociological Research Online 为季刊,最新一期(Volume 29 Issue 4, December 2024)分为“Articles”“Sociology in Action”“Beyond the text”“Book Reviews”“SRO Thank You to Referees 2024”五个栏目,共计23篇文章,详情如下。

原版目录

SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ONLINE

原文摘要

SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ONLINE

Articles

Between Breaking Bad and Big Brother: Social Class and Television Preferences in Croatia

Krešimir Krolo, Željka Tonković, Dina Vozab

This article addresses TV preferences as a marker of class divisions both as a type of embodied cultural capital and as a pattern of consumption within the local and global cultural structure in Croatia. Data analysis is extracted from the survey ‘Social Stratification in Croatia: Structural and Subjective Aspects’, conducted on a nationally probabilistic sample of adult Croatian citizens. Factor analysis discovered two main dimensions of television preferences: reality spectacle and foreign fiction preferences, which were recognised as indicators of localised and globalised culture preferences. Further analysis established that these factors are also structured along the class positions of the respondents. Using multiple regression analysis, data suggest the conclusion that the working class prefers TV content in the domestic language and heavy on popular entertainment programming (soap operas, talent, and reality shows). However, the dominant class repudiate ‘lowbrow’ TV content, which highlights class divisions in the cultural field. The analysis sheds light not only on how class positions structure these preferences but also on the important role of age, gender, and music taste play in the formation of television preferences.

Independent Celebrant-Led Wedding Ceremonies: Translating, Tweaking, and Innovating Traditions

Sharon Blake, Rebecca Probert, Tania Barton, Rajnaara Akhtar

This article explores ceremonial design of independent celebrant-led wedding ceremonies in England and Wales. It draws on a qualitative study which involved focus groups with celebrants and interviews with individuals who have had an independent celebrant-led wedding ceremony. Six factors are described which influenced how couples translated and tweaked traditions or innovated ceremonial elements: faith, heritage, values, kin, informality, and temporality. In line with a bricolage process, it is suggested that the keeping of and minor adaption of traditions through the personalisation offered by independent celebrant-led wedding ceremonies may support inclusion of relationship practices such as interfaith couplings and blended families. Examples of kinship display-work and self-display-work were found throughout participant accounts of their wedding ceremonies. It is proposed that both may act as an important means by which the needs of individuals for whom a religious or belief framework is not prioritised over other contexts of identification can be met in a wedding ceremony. Further research is needed to explore the transferability of these findings to larger samples, as well as specific sub-populations.

Hoof Work: The Feminisation of Donkeys in Ethiopia

Martha Rose Geiger

This article explores how gendered divisions of labour manifest across species lines. It applies a feminist, more-than-human intersectional approach, building on previous work on animal labour. The vital labour donkeys do with and for humans and their contributions to multispecies societies have been under-recognised and under-theorised. Drawing on empirical research conducted in central Ethiopia on the human-donkey relationship, findings reveal the multiple ways human gender and class coalesce to shape the kinds of labour performed and social relations among women, men, and donkeys across urban and rural environments. At the nexus of these intersecting forces, equivalence is drawn, by research participants themselves, between women and donkeys. Women and donkeys are aligned and othered, differentiated from men, a dynamic that results in the feminisation of donkeys and mutual marginalisation of women and donkeys and exposes male violence perpetrated on both groups. The article contributes empirical insights into human-donkey relations and interspecies labour and offers theoretical considerations of more-than-human intersectionality.

The Persistence of the University Dream: Class and Social Mobility as Projected by Students at a Chilean University

Félix Rojo-Mendoza, Denisse Sepúlveda, Sánchez, Fernando Baeza Rivas

Higher education is considered an important dimension for building more egalitarian societies. However, despite the social value assigned to it, international evidence indicates that the social status of students’ families continues to prevent significant mobility in the social structure. In Chile, despite policies to increase access to higher education, the university system continues to reproduce inequalities of origin through selection, separating elite students from low-income students. In this context, little is known about the perception that university students have of the role that these institutions play in social mobility, especially for those of more disadvantaged social origins. This article explores and describes the persistence of the university dream among Chilean’s students at the Catholic University of Temuco, the Chilean educational institution with the highest percentage of poor students in the country, analyzing it on the understanding that aspirations represent idealist targets of the desired social class, while expectations represent realistic goals regarding the expected social class. Based on a statistical analysis of survey data from 209 students, results show that students’ family origin does not prevent them from projecting themselves as part of a higher class, with the university acting as an agent that dynamizes positions to favor greater homogeneity in the future social structure. In addition, postgraduate degrees are defined as a catalyst for future social mobility. Finally, the future tensions between the still-hegemonic meritocratic discourse and the reality of the social space that these students will occupy are discussed.

‘Vulnerability’ at Work: Instrumental Vulnerabilities Among Software Professionals

Vanessa Ciccone

As a self-improvement discourse, ‘vulnerability’ brings a compelling promise for software workplaces around engendering productivity, innovation and creativity among employees. While critical studies have interrogated various self-improvement discourses, less is known about how workers respond to and negotiate these discourses in professional contexts. This article asks how workers of North American software companies construct vulnerability. It finds that constructions instrumentalize vulnerability in the workplace as the exposure of failures, mistakes and knowledge gaps to enact organizational resilience. Drawing from interviews, the article discusses the implications of these constructions.

‘I’ve Wondered Why Am I Here?’ Expectations of Old Age and the Ageing Body in a Longitudinal Study of a Dance Group

Anna Goulding

Mainstream expectations of older age place pressure on individuals––both negative discourses focused upon frailty and isolation and successful ageing narratives that emphasize physical and mental exercise. This article considers whether older people can challenge damaging narratives through participating in the practice of modern dance. Over the course of 4 years, action research and ethnographic-based methods were used as the author worked with a dance company of seven members aged 69 to 89 as they created a modern dance piece. Data included fieldnotes, transcripts of individual interviews and group discussions and a video of the performance. A thematic analysis was applied. Moving away from a health perspective, the literature on ageing and lifestyle is advanced by in examining how the group’s creativity should be understood and valued. Participants went from presenting as active agers to developing a more accepting attitude towards their ageing body. The performance refashioned the space as a site of intergenerational connectivity as the dancers and audience co-produced narratives around the artistry of the older body. An original contribution to the work on embodiment is made by revealing how older men and women use dance differently to negotiate the ageing body. Findings have wider implications for research on inclusion by showing how the embodied practice of dance helps subvert expectations of older age.

Transnational Affect and the Making of a Moral Public: The War on Drugs in the Philippines

Paul-François Tremlett

In 2019, IBON International and the Campaign for Human Rights in the Philippines UK (CHRP-UK) made preparations for some relatives of some of the victims of former Philippine President Duterte’s war on drugs to travel to meet members of the European Parliament as well as diasporic and other publics in Europe and the UK. At the same time, the play Tao Po! – ‘Is Anybody There?’ – a dramatic monologue exploring different perspectives of those involved in Duterte’s drug war including those of victims and perpetrators, was touring Europe. These affectively saturated actions and performances were accompanied by social media posts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, among other platforms, using hashtags such as #Stopthekillingsph and #Warondrugsph. I juxtapose two very different interpretations of these actions and performances. On the one hand, I frame them as elements of a political strategy performed to solicit particular affective responses as a means of assembling a transnational public that could bring international political pressure to bear on the Duterte regime. On the other hand, I suggest that these actions were performed to cultivate a sense of belonging to a moral public. I conclude by arguing that the enactment of affects such as grief and loss – affects which are constitutive of the war on drugs – suggests a model of social and political change that works from the bottom-up, with affective experience as the primary catalyst.

With God We Distrust! The Impact of Values in Conspiracy Theory Beliefs About Migration in Serbia

Türkay Salim Nefes, Jasna Milošević Đorđević, Milica Vdović

Immigrants are a popular target of conspiracy theories. Despite the urgent relevance of the topic all around the world today, the number of studies on conspiracy theories about migrants and immigration is limited. Helping to fill this important gap in the academic literature, the research analyses conspiracy theory beliefs about migrants and immigration in contemporary Serbia through survey data from a nationally representative sample (N = 1199). Expanding on the Weberian theory of rationality, the study proposes that people’s values about national sovereignty, social conservatism, and religiosity influence their predispositions to believe in conspiracy theories about migrants and immigration. The findings corroborate the argument by showing a statistically significant link between people’s political, social, and religious values and responses to conspiracy theories. The article concludes that values could play a significant role in people’s adoption of conspiracy theories.

‘It Feels Like a Big Performance’: Space, Performativity and Young Woman Skateboarders

Carrie Paechter, Lyndsey Stoodley, Michael Keenan, Chris Lawton

In this article, we apply philosophical and sociological theory to consider how young women skateboarders interact with and are affected by performative aspects of skateboarding cultures. Drawing on findings from a qualitative study of three skateparks plus other skate spaces in and around two English cities, we argue that these spaces are performative in nature and that this is frequently problematic for young woman skateboarders. We suggest that, due to their comparative rarity in these spaces, young women are put under an immediate spotlight on entry, with an expectation that they perform a competent skateboarder identity while under scrutiny from other users of the space; we examine their experiences of this. We conclude by suggesting ways that skateparks and skatespaces can be designed and used to make them more accessible to woman and girl skaters, and to other groups marginalised in skateboarding cultures.

Misbehaviour on Retreat: Rule-Breaking and the Labours of the Self

James Hodgson

Current scholarship tends to frame retreat-going, and the practices carried out therein, as emblematic of late-modern forms of self-work, understanding retreats as part of broader personal life projects of self-mastery and self-knowledge. For this article, I draw on empirical data to suggest that, although work on the self is typically the central concern for retreat-goers, they also question or outright reject the discipline of the retreat space by breaking its ‘rules’. Borrowing insights developed in the context of organisation studies, I describe two kinds of such ‘misbehaviour’ on retreat. First, I explore how retreat-goers misbehave in regards to the rules around intimacy, since sexual and erotic desire is usually discouraged but nonetheless features in retreat-goers’ experiences. Then, I explore examples of collective misbehaviour and suggest that retreat-goers often work together to ensure the retreat’s success by collaboratively breaking the rules through practices like gossip. This article contributes an understanding of how wellbeing practices might be usefully made sense of as social accomplishments, situated within the greater swathe of everyday life. But I also map out one way in which the concept of ‘misbehaviour’ might be applied to activities outside of the workplace.

Developing ‘Age-Friendly’ Communities: The Experience of International Retired Migrants

Marion Repetti, Toni Calasanti, Chris Phillipson

Over the past two decades, the need to create ‘age-friendly cities and communities’ (AFCC) has emerged as a major theme in policies aimed at improving old people’s physical and social environment. The World Health Organization (WHO) has driven this agenda through the launch in 2010 of the Global Network of Age-friendly Cities and Communities. Support for ageing in place has, at the same time, run alongside an increase in international retirement migration, with people choosing not to age in their existing neighbourhood but rather to relocate to another country. The growth of retirement migration has occurred in the context of specialized housing and leisure-orientated developments in cheaper countries targeting retirees from richer countries. This article draws on the narratives of retirees of the UK, Switzerland, France and the USA who have relocated to Spain, Costa Rica and Mexico on a permanent basis. It highlights the reasons migrants put forward to explain the advantages of living in their new home, and what we can learn about the conditions for an age-friendly living environment. This article begins with a review of the development of age-friendly cities and communities, then outlines the concept of ‘elective belonging’ which is used to provide a framework for understanding the growth of retirement migration. Following an overview of current knowledge on retirement migration and a discussion of the methodology of the study, we present the results from interviews with retired migrants about their experiences within their new communities. Finally, we discuss the implications of our study for developing research and policies which acknowledge how age as a social status may be used as a means of fostering the integration of older people within their communities.

Young People Experiencing Multiple Mobilities: In Search of an Oasis of Youth Across Europe

Ewa Krzaklewska, Valentina Cuzzocrea

In this study, we look at those young Europeans who have undertaken more than one Erasmus stay abroad during their higher education to reflect on spaces for youth development. On the basis of 18 qualitative interviews with such Erasmus students, we propose the concept of an ‘oasis of youth’ to highlight the potential for the exploration of the self that occurs through participation in mobilities. We revisit and reassess J.J. Arnett’s concept of emerging adulthood to reflect on spaces for exploration for young people in Europe. As the analysis suggests, this ‘oasis of youth’ may symbolise a niche in which young people live out a youthful lifestyle (being), while getting prepared for the transitions to adulthood (becoming). Beyond this particular case, the concept of an oasis of youth may serve to describe the diverse social spaces that express the social value of youth allowing them to live youth momentum while in education, despite growing uncertainty and harshened structural conditions.

The Perceptions of Prostitution, Sex Work, and Sex Trafficking among Young People in Spain

Carmen Meneses-Falcón, Antonio Rúa-Vieites, Olaya García-Vázquez

This article analyses the viewpoints of Spanish youth regarding prostitution, sex workers, and their opinions on what the law surrounding sex work should be. Spain is currently in the grip of a great debate, tending to adopt the punishment of sex buyers. To investigate this issue, 3126 young participants aged 16–30 were surveyed through an online questionnaire in December 2020, which consisted of 21 questions. A factor analysis revealed three distinct perceptions of prostitution falling into three categories: ‘As a choice’ (22.8%), ‘as coercive’ (27.9%), and ‘as economic necessity’ (49.3%). Correspondingly, the legal positions on prostitution varied depending on the perceptions of paid sex: viewing prostitution ‘as coercive’ was associated with the criminalisation of prostitution, while considering sex work ‘as a choice’ was related to the regulation of prostitution. In conclusion, the young Spaniards surveyed do not consider all those who offer paid sex as victims of trafficking; instead, they differentiate based on the connection between trafficking and the sex industry. These diverse perceptions contribute to policy recommendations aimed at preventing the negative consequences of prostitution, implementing harm reduction measures to safeguard sex workers, and moving beyond dichotomous policies of criminalization and regulation.

Mediating Gender Norms Through the ‘Foodies’ Culture as Romantic Emotions

Wei-Ping Chen

This study explores how intimacy is shaped through mobile-mediated dating, which is seasoned with culinary preferences and gendered conventions. Drawing on the sociological concept of mediated intimacy and attending to emotionalised culinary experiences and gendered individualism, this study asks three questions. First, how is intimacy represented by dining-dating apps? Second, how do these dining-dating apps approach ‘being single’? Third, what gender relations and what contradictions between romance and consumerism can be identified in dating that is managed by an app and that trades in intimate commodities? By analysing the advertising text, testimonials, and reviews posted online, I demonstrate that individuals are not only invited to manage their intimate life through cultural consumption but are also compelled to adopt accelerated and mediated ways of engaging. I reveal that the limited and regulated access to communicative exchanges and the extended follow-up dinner dates in dining-dating apps is related to concerns about personal and relational investment. Furthermore, I argue that dining-dating apps participate in the mediation of emotions and gender relations by introducing intimate commodities that blur the borders between individualist aspiration and gendered and classed ways of experiencing intimacy. Together, these findings provide a particularly interesting context and open up new avenues for studying intimacy, gender, and cultural consumption in sociology and media studies.

Sugar Rush or Sugar Risk? Experiences with Risks and Risk Management among Young Sugar Daters

Theresa Dyrvig Henriksen, Josefine Frøslev-Thomsen

Sugar dating is a complex phenomenon that unfolds on a continuum between traditional dating and sex work. Existing research shows that sugar dating is often portrayed as rife with potential physical and social risks, and from a societal standpoint, it is also often characterized as a risky activity, particularly for young individuals. In this article, we investigate the emergence of these risks and how young sugar daters strategize to minimize them. The findings demonstrate that risk in sugar dating is influenced by complex social and cultural contexts, where especially the stigmatized nature and gendered storyline of sugar dating constitute risks for young sugar daters. These risks are further shaped by the cultural construction of late-modern sexuality, which favours elusive and volatile sexual relations combined with a desire to explore while being young. The young women in this study view sugar dating as a temporary activity that they do not imagine themselves engaging in when they get older. They associate sugar dating with the phase of youth, but unlike other types of youth risk-taking, sugar dating does not occur within the social context of peers. Instead, risk management in the context of sugar dating primarily becomes an individual responsibility, as involving others is perceived as carrying substantial social risks of being labelled as sexually immoral. The study underscores that risk in sugar dating does not exist in a vacuum; rather, it is intertwined with complex social and cultural contexts surrounding sugar dating. By shedding light on these intricate factors, our research contributes to a comprehensive understanding of the lived experiences and dynamics of risk management within the realm of sugar dating.

Sociology in Action

Understanding Food Assistance Through Care: Theoretical Insights

Fábio Rafael Augusto

Two theoretical perspectives have been extensively mobilized to understand the social role of food assistance initiatives, namely ‘food security’ and ‘political economy’. The main objective of this article is to develop an alternative theoretical approach that allows for more comprehensive analyses. Building on Thomas’s (1993) conceptual work on care, it is expected to encourage the development of studies that incorporate less-obvious elements that (also) characterize food assistance organizations, such as the various interactions and practices that are not directly related to food donations.

Leaping the Abyss: The Problematic Translation of Social Research Results into Policy Recommendations

Seweryn Rudnicki, Katarzyna Wojnicka

This article argues that translating social research findings into policy recommendations may pose a significant methodological and practical challenge. Due to the current emphasis on the ‘third mission’ of universities and the ‘relevance’ of scientific knowledge, it has become more common for sociologists to engage in projects that include the development of social-research-based recommendations. This article analyses empirically an example of such a project – an extensive, European Commission–funded study about the role of men in gender equality in Europe – and shows that developing recommendations may receive lower priority than producing findings, be unguided by any specific method or approach, and operate within an ‘aura of evidence’ rather than a ‘hierarchy of evidence’. Discouraging an all-too-easy criticism, this article argues for more reflection, frameworks, and methods that could support sociologists in the development of research-based guidelines for policies.

Beyond the Text

‘Creating Poverty Chances’: Young People Confront Gambling Harms in Malawi

Otiyela Mtema, Isaac ‘Starlic’ Singano, Darragh McGee, Yamiko Yakobe, Junious Sichali, Mphatso, Makamo, Gerda Reith, Christopher Bunn

Commercialised gambling products have spread rapidly through African countries in recent years and have been woven into the everyday experiences of young people. Research to date has documented this phenomenon through conventional social science methodologies, establishing an important body of knowledge. Absent from this work is research that adopts participatory and creative methods, often argued to be particularly well suited to empowering marginalised groups to co-produce research. In this piece, we describe a co-creative participatory approach to working with 24 young people in Malawi to explore experiences of commercial gambling and its impacts on their communities. Our approach was co-developed with the young people and produced a substantial body of community interviews, photovoice pieces, and creative representations of the research findings. Here, we focus on a song written and recorded by one of the young people that draws on and represents themes of distress, addiction, poverty, and false hope, which were present in the data the young people generated across the study.

Reclaim the Night(Life) – Sexual Harassment in the Night-Time Economy: Zine Making as Method and Participant-Led Data Analysis

Ian R Lamond, Kate Dashper, Michelle Lanham, Hannah Rossmorris, Dan Lomax

This short reflective piece sets out the background to the Reclaim the (Night) Life project, an ongoing research project into sexual violence/harassment in the night-time economy of Leeds (UK). This initial output from the project, which has involved a team of five academics from the UK Centre for Event Management at Leeds Beckett University, is based on work produced at a co-creational zine-making workshop. The workshop involved a group of students, from the university, working with their lived experience and using the workshop to support them in undertaking some initial analysis of data captured from a prior online survey. Sociologically, the zine’s purpose is to share initial research findings in a way that could engage its target demographic (young women), give voice to some of their experiences, explore zine making as a form of data capture and participant-led data analysis, and act as a prevocational device for the next stages of the Reclaim the (Night)Life research project.

Book Reviews

Book Review: Tony Bennett, Habit’s Pathways: Repetition, Power, Conduct

Gordana Angelichin-Zhura

Book Review: Edited by Sonja Ganseforth and Hanno Jentzsch, Rethinking Locality in Japan

Meriç Kırmızı

Book Review: Yi-Lin Chiang, Study Gods: How the New Chinese Elite Prepare for Global Competition

Yuhao Peng

SRO Thank You to Referees 2024

[注:以上内容均为SRO文章观点,不代表本刊立场]

以上就是本期 JCS Focus 的全部内容啦!

期刊/趣文/热点/漫谈

学术路上,

JCS 陪你一起成长!

关于 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)。

▉ 欢迎向《中国社会学学刊》投稿!!

Please consider submitting to

The Journal of Chinese Sociology!

▉ 官方网站:

https://journalofchinesesociology.springeropen.com

特别声明:以上内容(如有图片或视频亦包括在内)为自媒体平台“网易号”用户上传并发布,本平台仅提供信息存储服务。

Notice: The content above (including the pictures and videos if any) is uploaded and posted by a user of NetEase Hao, which is a social media platform and only provides information storage services.

相关推荐
热点推荐
黄仁勋最新惊人观点:英语专业将血洗计算机,文科成AI时代新贵族

黄仁勋最新惊人观点:英语专业将血洗计算机,文科成AI时代新贵族

南宗历史
2026-03-28 19:31:50
以色列军方:六名士兵在与真主党的冲突中丧生

以色列军方:六名士兵在与真主党的冲突中丧生

参考消息
2026-03-30 21:43:31
伊朗镇压抗议关键人物被击毙 以色列空袭直指核心层

伊朗镇压抗议关键人物被击毙 以色列空袭直指核心层

桂系007
2026-03-30 05:43:28
又感慨,“这下中国超级大国地位更稳了”

又感慨,“这下中国超级大国地位更稳了”

观察者网
2026-03-30 11:12:23
世界乱,中国稳!油价暴涨下,为什么各国抢着买中国核电站?

世界乱,中国稳!油价暴涨下,为什么各国抢着买中国核电站?

涵豆说娱
2026-03-30 10:57:29
涉事人员已停职!三甲医院紧急道歉

涉事人员已停职!三甲医院紧急道歉

梅斯医学
2026-03-30 18:36:15
丰田终于被当作真电车!铂智7预售破万,用户对比最多的是Model 3

丰田终于被当作真电车!铂智7预售破万,用户对比最多的是Model 3

言车有徐
2026-03-29 21:20:33
3-2到3-5!塔猜亚被轰3连鞭,或8连败克星,特鲁姆普0-4无缘8强?

3-2到3-5!塔猜亚被轰3连鞭,或8连败克星,特鲁姆普0-4无缘8强?

刘姚尧的文字城堡
2026-03-30 22:43:16
好变态!1090投1000中!92%的命中率炸裂了!!

好变态!1090投1000中!92%的命中率炸裂了!!

柚子说球
2026-03-29 17:52:30
央视发文:60岁释永信再迎噩耗,牵连明星真相大白

央视发文:60岁释永信再迎噩耗,牵连明星真相大白

最美的笔触
2026-03-30 07:39:41
CBA本季三分本土首人:贺希宁狂轰101三分 成深圳+中国男篮大腿

CBA本季三分本土首人:贺希宁狂轰101三分 成深圳+中国男篮大腿

醉卧浮生
2026-03-30 13:18:56
苹果M5 Max暴力输出!虚拟机实测Windows游戏:3A完全无压力

苹果M5 Max暴力输出!虚拟机实测Windows游戏:3A完全无压力

快科技
2026-03-30 12:30:35
约80层楼高的神女大扶梯,把巫山县城推向了台前

约80层楼高的神女大扶梯,把巫山县城推向了台前

新京报
2026-03-30 16:45:46
高三学生因不堪鸟鸣写信请求拆除鸟巢,校长婉拒称“世界不会为某个人因某事而暂停”,学生回应:对生命与自然有了新的思考

高三学生因不堪鸟鸣写信请求拆除鸟巢,校长婉拒称“世界不会为某个人因某事而暂停”,学生回应:对生命与自然有了新的思考

大风新闻
2026-03-28 20:14:32
澳门的赌台,大面积关停!不是没人去,而是被“算法”割废的?

澳门的赌台,大面积关停!不是没人去,而是被“算法”割废的?

番外行
2026-03-30 11:08:07
杉杉集团家族内斗失控

杉杉集团家族内斗失控

地产微资讯
2026-03-27 10:10:55
速效救心丸、硝酸甘油、阿司匹林,关键时刻用哪个?答案跟你想的不一样

速效救心丸、硝酸甘油、阿司匹林,关键时刻用哪个?答案跟你想的不一样

人民日报健康客户端
2026-03-27 21:12:30
事关中朝关系,金正恩做出一个前所未有的表态

事关中朝关系,金正恩做出一个前所未有的表态

近史博览
2026-03-30 09:48:04
54股今日获机构买入评级

54股今日获机构买入评级

证券时报
2026-03-30 18:18:15
华为 2025 股票分红每股 1.16 元,越来越低

华为 2025 股票分红每股 1.16 元,越来越低

ICT动态
2026-03-30 13:32:15
2026-03-30 23:39:00
社会学研究杂志 incentive-icons
社会学研究杂志
《社会学研究》官方帐号
1086文章数 954关注度
往期回顾 全部

教育要闻

人大附中新动作!北京多所名校“搞大事”!

头条要闻

媒体:郑丽文受邀访大陆核心原因 从当前局势看不难猜

头条要闻

媒体:郑丽文受邀访大陆核心原因 从当前局势看不难猜

体育要闻

想进世界杯,意大利还要过他这一关

娱乐要闻

全红婵聊到体重哭了,每天只吃一顿饭

财经要闻

本轮地缘冲突,A股凭什么走出独立行情

科技要闻

一句谎言引发的硅谷血案

汽车要闻

限时12.58万起 银河星耀8远航家系列上市

态度原创

教育
健康
游戏
房产
军事航空

教育要闻

当心,这家投诉量1700+!高新区公布体培机构“黑名单”

干细胞抗衰4大误区,90%的人都中招

神人腾讯开发的神人二游,全都是科技与狠活?

房产要闻

重磅!番禺20宗涉宅地亮相,万博CBD宅地将上新!

军事要闻

第三艘航母出动数千名士兵抵达 美军大举增兵中东战场

无障碍浏览 进入关怀版