Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
people's experiences. Social transformation involves the mobilization and con-
struction of myths, namely a composite of shared knowledge, critique, and
visionary thinking.
The chapters in this final section are provocative, as they raise questions about scholars in their roles as researchers, teachers, mentors, and colleagues. To
mention one: how is our own vision of a better world ± or our ease with, or
our cynicism about, the present one ± conveyed to students in the classroom?
They also raise questions about the foundation of sociological inquiry and
understanding. Through this century the academy is bound to become more
diverse, with growing access to education by previously excluded groups. This
diversity itself will no doubt provide the foundations for creative dialogues,
contention, and new grounds for consensus.
Finally, the Appendix, ``Data Resources on the World Wide Web,'' prepared by
Kathryn Harker, is a listing of Internet sites for data sources for the purpose of research. It was designed, in part, to encourage international research. It includes listings of established research centers and government agencies that are likely to maintain and expand their databases. Therefore, we consider the listing as
helpful for the purposes of research, and as a source for descriptive comparisons for teaching.
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments
Susan Rabinowitz, at Blackwell Publishers, suggested that I undertake this
project, and after consulting with Karen Edwards, a friend at the American
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Preface
Sociological Association, and Robert K. Merton, who questioned the wisdom of
my doing it, I agreed. There is a great deal of exciting work in sociology these days, and, quite frankly, I thought of the venture as something like a sabbatical in which I would do an immense amount of reading. Because I did this for the
fun of it, royalties will be donated to the Minority Fellowship Program of the
American Sociological Association. Susan Rabinowitz was extremely helpful
and, after launching the project, turned me over to Ken Provencher. He was
my great ally and adviser. He is knowledgeable and wise, and was always
gracious and helpful. He made all of the truly bad moments turn out perfectly
fine, and I am truly thankful to him for his support. Rhonda Pearce and John
Taylor brought the project into home base.
For their kind suggestions in the early stage of this project, I am especially
grateful to Sylvia Walby and Gill Jones, and also Pierre Bourdieu, Hans Joas,
Elihu Katz, Amartya Sen, and Angelika von Wahl. This book is dedicated to
Professor Sen. His contributions to the social sciences are foundational.
The Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, provided support for the preparation of the Appendix, for which I thank
the Chair, Arne Kalleberg. Several students, including John Hipp and Keri Iyall
Smith, were helpful with the electronic retrieval of graphs and manuscripts.
Most especially, I thank Anita Sharon ``Shea'' Farrell, who, with meticulous
care and good cheer, logged the manuscripts, cross-checked many references,
standardized the formatting, and kept up with the revisions as they arrived.
Judith R. Blau
Contributors
Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naìm is Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law,
Emory University. He is the author of Toward an Islamic Reformation: Civil
Liberties, Human Rights and International Law; editor of Human Rights
in Cross-cultural Perspectives: Quest for Consensus; Human Rights in Africa:
Cross-cultural Perspectives (with Francis Deng). He has also published numer-
ous articles and book chapters on human rights, constitutionalism and Islamic
law and politics.
Contributors
Judith R. Blau is Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill and President of the US chapter of Sociologists without Borders, an
international NGO. She is the author of Architects and Firms (1984), The Shape
of Culture (1989), Social Contracts and Economic Markets (1993), and Race in
the Schools (2003), and has published articles on organizations, networks,
economic inequalities, crime, sociology of science, urban sociology, historical
sociology, medical sociology, and sociology of education.
Frederick H. Buttel is Professor and Chair, Department of Rural Sociology, and
Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
He is currently the President of the Environment and Society Research Commit-
tee (RC 24)of the International Sociological Association, and was previously
President of the Rural Sociological Society.
Charles Camic is Martindale-Bascom Professor of Sociology at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. Currently, he is also Co- editor of the American Sociological Review. He has written extensively on the interrelationship between the institutional and intellectual development of American sociology in the 1880±1940
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Contributors
period. He is completing a book on the early career of Talcott Parsons and has
begun research on a new intellectual biography of Thorstein Veblen.
William A. Darity, Jr is Boshamer Professor of Economics at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Adjunct Professor in Sociology, and Research
Professor at Duke University. His research includes cross-national investigations of racial and ethnic economic inequality, North±South models of trade and
growth, the impact of financial crises on developing countries, economics of
the Atlantic slave trade, and the social-psychological effects of exposure to
unemployment. He has published more than 120 articles in professional journals
and several books.
Bonnie Thornton Dill, professor of Women's Studies and Director of the
Research Consortium and Gender, Race and Ethnicity at the University of
Maryland, College Park, conducts research on African American women,
work, and family. Her books include Women of Color in US Society, co-edited
with Maxine Baca Zinn, and Across the Boundaries of Race and Class.
Raine Dozier is a graduate student in sociology at the University of Washington.
She is working primarily in the fields of gender, sexuality, and culture.
Troy Duster is Chancellor's Professor of Sociology at the University of Califor-
nia, Berkeley, and Professor of Sociology, Institute for the History of the Production of Knowledge at New York University. He has been a member of the
National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research, and the Assembly
of Behavioral and Social Sciences of the National Academy of Sciences, and
served as Chair of the Advisory Committee on Ethical, Legal and Social Issues of the Human Genome Project.
Bonnie Erickson is a member of the Department of Sociology at the University of
Toronto. Her research interests include social networks, culture, work, gender,
and health. She has recently studied the role of different forms of culture in the workplace and the roots of culture in social networks (''Culture, class, and
connections,'' American Journal of Sociology, 1996), the widely varying gender
outcomes in the security industry, and social networks in a large alternative
economy.
Rick Fantasia is Professor of Sociology at Smith College in Northampton,
Massachusetts. The author of Cultures of Solidarity and various other writings
on labor and on culture, Fantasia is currently working on a study of the symbolic and material dimensions of American mass cultural goods in France and their
relationship to traditional sources of cultural authority.
August Gijswijt has published in the areas of the sociology of housing, public
administration, and environmental sociology. Between 1990 and 1998 he was
Contributors
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board member and secretary of the Research Committee on Environment and
Society of the International Sociological Association.
David M. Grant is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Cleveland State Uni-
versity. His current research focuses on poverty and various aspects of urban
inequality, particularly racial inequality in the labor market. He received his PhD
from UCLA in 1998 and has published several articles on race and inequality in
Los Angeles.
Neil Gross is Assistant Professor, University of Southern California. His work
has appeared in Sociological Theory, the Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Theory and Society, and the Annual Review of Sociology. His dissertation is a case study in the sociology of ideas.
Maureen Hallinan is the William P. and Hazel B. White Professor of Sociology
and Director of the Program on the Social Organization of Schools of the
Institute for Educational Initiatives at the University of Notre Dame. She cur-
rently studies the determinants and consequences of the organization of instruc-
tion, and organizational effects on students' social relationships. Her previous research includes studies of cross- race friendships in middle and secondary
schools.
Kathryn Harker is a graduate student in the Sociology Department at the Uni-
versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her research interests include race and ethnicity, immigration, and the psychological wellbeing of adolescent immigrants.
Pamela Herd is pursuing a PhD in Sociology at Syracuse University. Her main
interest areas are aging, the welfare state, and care work.
Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo is Associate Professor in the Department of Soci-
ology and in the Program in American Studies and Ethnicity at the University
of Southern California. She is author of Gendered Transitions: Mexican
Experiences of Immigration, co-editor of Challenging Fronteras: Structuring
Latina and Latino Lives in the US and Gender Through the Prism of Differ-
ence.
Bert Klandermans is professor in Applied Social Psychology at Free University,
Amsterdam. He has published extensively on the social psychological principles
of participation in social movements and labor unions. He is the editor of the
book series Social Movements, Protest, and Contention, and author of The
Social Psychology of Protest.
David Knoke is Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. His
research interests are organizations and social networks. A current project is
the changing network of strategic alliances in the global information sector.
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Contributors
Recently published books, with several co-authors, include Comparing Policy
Networks, Organizations in America, and Change at Work.
Richard E. Lee is a Senior Research Associate at the Fernand Braudel Center and
Assistant Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Bing-
hamton.
Madonna Harrington Meyer is Associate Professor of Sociology, and Senior
Research Associate at the Center for Policy Research, at Syracuse University.
She is editor of Care Work: Gender, Labor and Welfare States. Her research
emphasizes financial and health security for older Americans, particularly
women and persons of color.
Debra C. Minkoff is Associate Professor at the University of Washington. She is
the author of Organizing for Equality: The Evolution of Women's and Racial-
ethnic Organizations in America, and articles on the organizational dynamics of
contemporary American social movements, particularly the civil rights and
feminist movements. Her current research is on the structure of the US national
social movement sector.
Barbara A. Misztal is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Arts, School of Human-
ities at Griffith University, Brisbane. She is co-editor of Action on Aids (with D.
Moss)and author of Trust in Modern Society (1996)and Informality: Social
Theory and Contemporary Practice (2000).
Samuel L. Myers, Jr is the Roy Wilkins Professor of Human Relations and Social
Justice at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of
Minnesota, where he conducts research on racial economic inequality. Recent
co-authored publications include Faculty of Color in Academe and articles on
family structure, race and earnings disparities, racial differences in child abuse reporting, and the effect of race on alimony and child support appeals.
Melvin L. Oliver is Dean at the University of California±Santa Barbara. He
previously was Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Los
Angeles and Officer at the Ford Foundation. He has published widely in the
areas of race and ethnic relations, poverty and inequality, and urban studies.
Siddiqur Rahman Osmani is an economist whose research interests include
poverty, inequality, nutrition, hunger, health, and generally the problems of
economic development. He has worked at the Bangladesh Institute of Develop-
ment Studies, Dhaka, and at the World Institute for Development Economics
Research, Helsinki. He is currently Professor of Development Economics at the
University of Ulster.
John Durham Peters is Associate Professor of Communication Studies at the
University of Iowa. He is the author of Speaking into the Air (1999), and has
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received a Fulbright Fellowship to Greece, a Leverhulme Trust Fellowship to
England, and a Research Fellowship from the National Endowment for the
Humanities. He teaches courses on media, culture, and society, and social theory.