Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
Social Inequality, Stress, and Health
357
According to the job strain (demand-control) model of Karasek et al. (1981),
more demanding jobs are assumed to require more effort, but not necessarily to
generate distress. Those with decision latitude in their job have greater flexibility to decide how best to meet the demands of their job and are therefore predicted
to experience little or no distress. The jobs hypothesized to cause the most
distress are those that combine high demands (workload) and low decision
latitude, and this combination of job characteristics is labeled ``high strain.''
Two Swedish studies were the first to report an association in men between job
strain and the risk of a heart attack (Karasek et al., 1981; Alfredsson et al.,
1982). A US study reported evidence from two separate national health surveys
that men in occupations that other incumbents rated as high in demands and low
in decision latitude were more likely to have had a myocardial infarction
(Karasek et al., 1988). There have now been more than twenty studies, with
the vast majority showing that those in high strain jobs have a 20±300 percent
greater risk of CV disease (reviewed in Belkic et al., 2000).
One plausible mechanism by which job strain may increase CV risk is by
gradually increasing employees' resting blood pressures (BPs), eventually leading to the development of hypertension. Using 24±hour ambulatory blood pressure
monitoring and controlling for age, body mass, and race/ethnicity, the Work Site Blood Pressure Study found that men in high strain jobs had systolic BPs that
were 6±7 mmHg higher, both at work and at home, than those in jobs with high
decision latitude or low demands (Schnall et al., 1992). This same pattern was
observed when participants were re-evaluated three years later. Particularly
interesting was the finding that those classified as having high strain jobs at
both evaluations had systolic BPs that were 11 mmHg higher than those in non-
high strain jobs on both occasions (Schnall et al., 1998).
Like the demand-control model, the effort±reward imbalance model of Sieg-
rist (Matschinger et al., 1986; Siegrist et al., 1990; Siegrist, 1996) has two
dimensions. It is hypothesized that the combination of high effort and low
reward is pathogenic. Occupational rewards include aspects of control such as
job stability and promotion prospects, as well as wages, fringe benefits, and
status consistency. The combination of high effort and low reward has been
found to predict heart attacks (Siegrist et al., 1990).
A common feature of these and several other models of stress is the import-
ance of control. Whether a demanding situation is experienced as a challenge or
a stressor may well depend on the degree of control and flexibility the individual has in determining how best to fulfill the demands. It is important to realize that control is both a personality characteristic (as in locus of control, sense of
mastery) and a situational factor. Jobs vary enormously in the degree of control incumbents have over how to perform their tasks. In the Whitehall II Study, a
second longitudinal study of a large cohort of British civil servants, low control at work was able to account for more of the SES gradient in new cases of
coronary heart disease (over five years) than any other factor, including the
traditional risk factors (Marmot et al., 1997). In this same data set, the effort±
reward model predicted coronary heart disease better than the job strain model
(Bosma et al., 1998).
358
Joseph E. Schwartz
Are the Effects of Stressors Psychologically Mediated?
Most models of stress and health tacitly assume that (a) stressors cause an
emotional response (stress), (b) stress causes physiological changes in the body, and (c) these physiological changes contribute to morbidity and mortality (pathway ACD in figure 24.4). A major implication of this model is that if one can
intervene at the second stage ± for example, by teaching individuals stress
management skills ± one should be able to reduce the health consequences of a
stressful environment. A less obvious implication is that if, for some reason, an individual does not become stressed by a situation that others find stressful, then he or she should not exhibit a physiological response. However, it is worth
considering the possibility that environmental stressors can directly impact
physiology (pathway BD in figure 24.4; see LeDoux, 1996), and that part of
the association between emotions and physiology is spurious. This is consistent
with the finding of Feldman et al. (2000) that emotional responses to acute
stressors were not substantially correlated with cardiovascular (blood pressure
and heart rate) responses. Perhaps job strain/stress is bad even for those who
do not experience their jobs as stressful. If so, it would probably be more
effective to alter work environments than to alter how individuals respond to
these environments.
Animal Models of Stress
Sociologists interested in the role of stress on health should not ignore the
findings from well controlled experimental studies of animals. Many animal
researchers have used electric shock as a stressor. In one experiment, paired
rats were exposed to shocks (Weiss, 1972). One member of each pair had no
control over the situation, whereas the other could avoid the shock by pressing
its nose to a panel. The rats with no control had higher levels of circulating
cortisol and developed more gastric lesions than those rats who could avoid
the shocks. Using this same stress paradigm, exposure to unavoidable shock
Figure 24.4 Two models of the linkage from psychosocial stressors to morbidity and mortality.
Social Inequality, Stress, and Health
359
has been shown to suppress several parameters of the immune system and
promote tumor growth, leading investigators to conclude that lack of control,
or helplessness, alters the physiological response to a stressor (see review by
Shavit, 1991).
In an extensive program of research on cynomolgus monkeys, Kaplan, Man-
uck, and collaborators have investigated the impact of social stability, experi-
mentally manipulated, on dominant and non-dominant monkeys (Kaplan et al.,
1982, 1991). In the socially stable condition, three sets of five male monkeys
lived together for 22 months. In the unstable condition, 15 males were rotated
among three cages 14 times during the 22 months. Much more overt conflict was
observed among monkeys in the unstable condition, because the dominance
hierarchy had to be re-established every 4±12 weeks. At the end of the 22
months, the coronary arteries of the dominant monkeys in the unstable condi-
tion were found to have substantially greater atherosclerosis than those of the
dominant animals in the socially stable condition and the subordinate animals in either stability condition.
Animal research can also be used to identify factors that protect against the
effects of stress. In a fascinating program of research at McGill University,
Meaney and his colleagues have demonstrated that the amount of licking and
grooming behavior of a mother mouse toward her newborn pups permanently
alters brain physiology. Those pups who experience more licking and grooming
(LG) during the first three weeks of life develop a faster-acting negative feedback mechanism (relative to pups receiving less licking and grooming), causing
plasma levels of the stress hormone cortisol to return to normal more quickly
following the termination of a stressor. As adults, the LG mice are less fearful in new environments, are less reactive to a loud noise, and exhibit less hippocampal neuron loss and fewer spatial memory deficits at later ages (Meaney et
al., 1991; Liu et al., 1997). Subsequent research has shown that this effect varies across genetic strains of mice, such that maternal licking and grooming (LG)
matters more in genetically vulnerable strains, and matters very little in genetically hardy strains (Anisman et al., 1998).
Most recently, Meaney's group has conducted an elegant series of studies
documenting a high degree of consistency in the LG behavior of mothers from
one litter to the next and a high degree of intergenerational transmission of LG
behavior (i.e. a high correlation between the LG behavior of mothers and that of their grown daughters). They then demonstrated that by having the daughter of
a low-LG mother be raised by a high-LG mother, the daughter would grow up to
become a high-LG mother herself and her daughters would also become high-LG
mothers (Francis and Meaney, 1999). Similarly, through a manipulation involv-
ing handling of the pups, the researchers were able to make the naturally low-LG
mothers engage in high levels of LG, which was also transmitted intergenera-
tionally. These studies document that early social environment has profound and
permanent effects on a mouse's stress physiology, that effects that might well be assumed to be genetically transmitted are in fact socially/behaviorally transmitted across generations, and that a psychosocial intervention can foster
health-promoting behavior in mothers which is then transmitted to future
360
Joseph E. Schwartz
generations. At this point, we can only speculate about possible parallels with
parenting behavior towards newborn human infants.
Collectively, these and other studies have begun to document a variety of
physiological pathways by which stress(ors) may promote the development of,
or alter one's vulnerability to, disease. Current research is investigating the
contribution of these pathways to observed associations between chronic stress
exposure and illness in humans (for example, the association of work stress with blood pressure and cardiovascular disease). At a more general level, there is
increased interest in trying to estimate the extent to which stress and other
psychosocial factors can explain the association of socioeconomic status with
morbidity and mortality.
25
Two Research Traditions in the
Sociology of Education
Maureen T. Hallinan
The field of sociology of education is primarily a product of twentieth-century
scholarship. The roots of the discipline may be traced to the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century writings of Weber, Durkheim, Waller, and Parsons.
Building on the theoretical foundation laid by these sociologists, a rich and
comprehensive body of knowledge has accumulated over the past century
about the institution of education and its role in society.
In this chapter, I illustrate research in the sociology of education by examining two research traditions in which systematic scholarship has accumulated over
the past several decades. For each area I discuss theoretical and empirical studies, including both basic and applied work. I highlight these two traditions because
they include conceptually rich and analytically rigorous research and because
they encompass studies that are particularly relevant for contemporary Ameri-
can education. The areas are the organizational analysis of schools and the
transition from school to work.
The Organizational Analysis
Analysis of Schools
Conceptual Models of School Organization
Bidwell's (1965) seminal work on the school as a formal organization laid the
foundation for a large body of research by sociologists of education on
the organizational analysis of schools. Relying on Weber's (1946) description
of a bureaucracy, Bidwell depicted the school as possessing characteristics of a bureaucracy, including a functional division of labor, staff roles defined as
offices, a hierarchical arrangement of positions, and a set of rules of procedure.
At the same time, Bidwell emphasized that schools, in contrast to other
362
Maureen T. Hallinan
organizations, possessed à`structural looseness'' in the relationships among
their various components.
Early studies of school effects were based on an organizational perspective on
schools. Coleman et al.'s (1966) landmark study on equality of educational
opportunity estimated an input±output model of schools in which variation in
school resources and student characteristics predicted student achievement. This input±output model failed to specify the mechanisms that linked organizational
resources to student outputs and hence became known as thè`black box''
model. While research in this genre accomplished little in terms of explaining
the processes that affect learning, it did contribute important insights into
schooling. Not the least of these insights was demonstrated in the Coleman
Report, namely that family background plays a predominant role in student
achievement and must be considered along with the resources of schools when
studying school effects.
In an effort to specify more precisely how schools affect student achievement,
researchers in the late 1970s and 1980s focused on the processes that produce
learning. A recognition of the importance of the context of learning led to the
formulation of à`nested layers'' model of school organization. From this per-
spective, the outputs at one level of the organization become the inputs to
another level. For example, Gamoran and Dreeben (1986) discussed how
resource allocation affected teaching. They described the way school officials