Current Perspectives in Social Theory. Supplement 1: Recent Developments in the Theory of Social Structure.

1996 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 280
Author(s):  
Heinz-Gunter Vester ◽  
J. David Knottnerus ◽  
Christopher Prendergast

Reviews: Slavery, Desegregation: Resistance and Readiness, Minorities in the New World, the Foundations of Political Theory, Approaches to the Study of Politics, ‘British Attitudes to Politics,’ the Political Quarterly, Essays on ‘The Welfare State’, Work in the Lives of Married Women, Wives and Mothers in Victorian Industry, the Changing Social Structure of England and Wales, 1871–1951, Scottish Social Welfare, 1864–1914, a Survey of Social Conditions in England and Wales, Industrial Society and Social Welfare, Bureaucracy in New Zealand, in-Service Training for Social Agency Practice, Function, Purpose, and Powers, Social Change, Information, Decision and Action, the Idea of a Social Science, Political Power and Social Theory, Social Structure and Personality in the Factory, Productivity and Social Organization: The Ahmedabad Experiment, the Black-Coated Worker, New Ways in Management Training, Measuring Security in Personal Adjustment, the Psychology of Interpersonal Relations, on Shame and the Search for Identity, Outlines of East African Society, Colonial Planning: A Comparative Study, the Testing of Negro Intelligence, Diagnostic Performance Tests, the Rise of the Meritocracy, Social Theory and Christian Thought, Religious Behaviour, Television and the Child, Contemporary Sociology, Psychiatry in the British Army in the Second World War, Land of Choice, Readings in General Psychology, Educational Research, Technical Education, Dartington Hall, the Healing Voice

1959 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-280
Author(s):  
St. Clair Drake ◽  
J. Blondel ◽  
T. E. Chester ◽  
R. O. Williams ◽  
S. A. Sklaroff ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Charles Crothers ◽  
Lutz Bornmann ◽  
Robin Haunschild

Citations can be used in evaluative bibliometrics to measure the impact of papers. However, citation analysis can be extended by considering a multidimensional perspective on citation impact which is intended to receive more specific information about the kind of received impact. Bornmann, Wray, and Haunschild (2020) introduced the citation concept analysis (CCA) for capturing the importance and usefulness certain concepts (explained in publications) have in subsequent research. In this paper, we apply the method by investigating the impact various concepts introduced in Robert K. Merton’s book Social Theory and Social Structure has had. This book was to lay down a manifesto for sociological analysis in the immediate postwar period, and retains a major impact 70 years later. We found that the most cited concepts are “self-fulfilling” and “role” (about 20% of the citation contexts are related to one of these concepts). The concept “self-fulfilling” seems to be important especially in computer sciences and psychology. For “role,” this seems to be additionally the case for political sciences. These and further results of the study could demonstrate the high explanatory power of the CCA method.


2020 ◽  
pp. 001139212095211
Author(s):  
Anna Amelina ◽  
Manuela Boatcă ◽  
Gregor Bongaerts ◽  
Anja Weiß

The editorial summarizes the main conceptual and epistemological challenges of theorizing on society across borders. Its particular aim is to initiate the dialogue between theories of society and cross-border studies that address global, transnational and postcolonial relations. In essence, this special issue addresses four interrelated concerns of studying societal processes across borders. The first of these concerns is prompted by a decades-old critique of methodological nationalism. The second concern addresses the question of how can ‘society’ and the boundaries of ‘societalization’ be conceptualized, if global, transnational and postcolonial processes straddle the boundaries of nation-states? The third concern relates to the fact that sociological ‘grand’ theories have been criticized for failing to analyze recent developments of societies on a meso- and micro-level. Fourthly, a conversation between social theory and cross-border studies is also challenged by epistemic inequalities. Therefore, theories of society should be able to take into account not only the ‘grand scale’ of societal contexts and societal changes but also the positionality of the theorizing subject within global asymmetries of power.


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