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Inequality and Social Ties: Evidence from 15 U.S. Data Sets Sociological Science (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-12 Cristobal Young, Benjamin Cornwell, Barum Park, Nan Feng
What is the relationship between inequality and social ties? Do personal networks, group memberships, and connections to social resources help level the playing field, or do they reinforce economic disparities? We examine two core empirical issues: the degree of inequality in social ties and their consolidation with income. Using 142,000 person-wave observations from 15 high-quality U.S. data sets
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Feminisation, governance and Roma on the urban margins The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-12 Alina Pop, Filip Alexandrescu, Júlia Adorjáni, Ionu? Marian Anghel
The article delves into the governance of urban marginality, focusing on the interplay of the Wacquantian distinction between the left and right hands of the state in governing urban marginality and the gender dimension of this governance. Studies of state involvement in managing urban marginality have concentrated on the content of policies and services, neglecting their modes and forms. Our research
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Book Review: Richard Hyman and Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick, Towards a European System of Industrial Relations? HymanRichardGumbrell-McCormickRebeccaTowards a European System of Industrial Relations? The ETUC in the Twenty-First Century Brussels: European Trade Union Institute (ETUI), 2024, 30.00, (ISBN: 9782874527012), 225 pp. Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-10 Kunal Jha
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“I Actually Snapped”: Conceptualizing Resistance to Street Harassment as Feminist Snap and Erosion Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-05-08 Bianca Fileborn
In this article, I examine the strategies of resistance deployed by people who have experienced street harassment. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 47 heterosexual women and LGBTQ+ people, I document how participants skillfully and contextually deployed resistance strategies to disrupt harassment. Notably, participants often represented resistance practices as moments of affective, subconscious
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Slick and smooth: The role of petro-products in making and maintaining ‘femininity’ in the beauty salon The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-05-08 Louise Rondel
Drawing on research mapping the commodity chains associated with beauty salon consumption, this article examines the subtle yet pervasive ways in which oil works to make and maintain hairless ‘feminine’ bodies. Developing a methodological approach focused on the liveliness of depilatory wax, which included fostering a close attention to how wax behaves and asking Beauty Therapists to narrate what they
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Demographic Differences in Responses to a Two-Step Gender Identity Measure Sociological Science (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-06 Christina Pao, Christopher A. Julian, D’Lane Compton, Danya Lagos, Lawrence Stacey
Strategies for including noncisgender responses in demographic analyses remain subjects of ongoing debate and refinement. The Household Pulse Survey is one of the first data products by the U.S. Census Bureau to incorporate a two-step gender identity measure. This is significant because the survey, although experimental, is one of the largest federal nationally representative samples (n = 668,273)
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Generative AI Meets Open-Ended Survey Responses: Research Participant Use of AI and Homogenization Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-07 Simone Zhang, Janet Xu, AJ Alvero
The growing popularity of generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools presents new challenges for data quality in online surveys and experiments. This study examines participants’ use of large language models to answer open-ended survey questions and describes empirical tendencies in human versus large language model (LLM)-generated text responses. In an original survey of research participants recruited
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Integrating Generative Artificial Intelligence into Social Science Research: Measurement, Prompting, and Simulation Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-07 Thomas Davidson, Daniel Karell
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) offers new capabilities for analyzing data, creating synthetic media, and simulating realistic social interactions. This essay introduces a special issue that examines how these and other affordances of generative AI can advance social science research. We discuss three core themes that appear across the contributed articles: rigorous measurement and validation
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Stolen Pride: Loss, Shame, and the Rise of the Right, by ArlieHochschild, New York: The New Press, 2024. 383 pp. $30.99 (hardcover). ISBN: 978‐1‐62097‐643‐3. Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2025-05-07 Kai A. Schafft
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What Are You Talking about? Discussion Frequency of Issues Captured in Common Survey Questions Sociological Science (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-05-02 Turgut Keskintürk, Kevin Kiley, Stephen Vaisey
Social science surveys regularly ask respondents to generate opinions or positions on issues deemed to be of political and social importance, such as confidence in government officials or federal spending priorities. Many theories assume that interpersonal deliberation is a primary mechanism through which people develop positions on such issues, but it is unclear how often the issues captured by such
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Do Employers Care about Past Mobility? A Field Experiment Examining Hiring Preferences in Technology and Non-Technology Jobs Sociological Science (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-04-28 Matissa Hollister, Nicole Denier, Xavier St-Denis
Research in previous decades found that employers imposed penalties on job applicants with a past history of frequent moves across employers, and yet mobility across employers is more common in today’s economy and perhaps even a valuable career strategy. While popular discourse and some academic literature has portrayed highly mobile careers as widespread and broadly accepted, other studies have suggested
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Gendered Social Chains of Risk: Pathways of Childhood Maltreatment, Adolescent Peer Networks, and Depressive Symptoms Journal of Health and Social Behavior (IF 6.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-28 Molly Copeland, Christina Kamis
Childhood maltreatment is a serious stressor affecting mental health directly and indirectly through relationships, creating social chains of risk. Adolescent peers are one key relationship in the early life course, but whether peer networks mediate associations between maltreatment and mental health or if such pathways differ by gender remains unclear. We conduct path analysis on survey data from
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Order begins at home: Christian nationalism and control over children Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-27 Samuel L Perry
Studies have long documented a persistent link between sectarian Protestantism and authoritarian parenting ideologies and disciplinary practices. The current study proposes “Christian nationalism” as a schema that demands civic and social life be ordered according to sectarian Protestant norms, and consequently, a key dynamic in shaping how Americans think about parenting and punishment. Given that
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Stress Proliferation or Stress Relief? Understanding Mothers’ Health during Son’s Incarceration Journal of Health and Social Behavior (IF 6.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Kristin Turney, Rachel Bauman, MacKenzie A. Christensen, Rebecca Goodsell
Social stressors proliferate to impair the health of those connected to the person enduring the stressor, but they can simultaneously offer relief from other stressors. Using in-depth interviews with 69 mothers of incarcerated men, we investigate mothers’ descriptions of how the stressor of their adult son’s incarceration impairs their health. First, mothers overwhelmingly describe how the increased
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Examining Longitudinal Relationships between Social Support and Strain in Relationships with Children and Older Adults’ Cognitive Functioning Journal of Health and Social Behavior (IF 6.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Jennifer Caputo, Linda Waite, Kathleen A. Cagney
Relationships with children are often highly salient to older adults and can be characterized by both social support and strain. Although research suggests that social support and strain are linked to older adults’ cognitive functioning, few studies have considered reciprocal effects or examined potential explanatory mechanisms. This study uses data from the Health and Retirement Study (N = 7,639)
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Does Marriage Benefit Maternal Mental Health? New Evidence from Nairobi, Kenya Journal of Health and Social Behavior (IF 6.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Sangeetha Madhavan, Estelle Monique Sidze, Kirsten Michelle Stoebenau, Michael A. Wagner, Carol Wangui Wainaina
It has long been known that marriage is a critical correlate of mental health, primarily through relationship quality and support from partner. However, in contexts where couples struggle to maintain a healthy relationship and marriage is an increasingly protracted process, the benefits of marriage for women’s mental health are far from assured. In this analysis, we draw on survey and qualitative data
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Consequences of Eviction-Led Forced Mobility for School-Age Children in Houston Sociol. Educ. (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Peter Hepburn, Danny Grubbs-Donovan, Nick Graetz, Olivia Jin, Matthew Desmond
Eviction cases are concentrated among renter households with children, yet we know little about the repercussions of evictions for children’s educational trajectories. In this study, we link eviction records in Harris County, Texas, to educational records of students enrolled in the Houston Independent School District between 2002 and 2016. At least 13,000 public school students in Houston lived in
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Higher education and nation-building after Empire: Migrant students in post-war Britain The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Lili Schwoerer, Sanaz Raji
Sociological literature increasingly turns its eye towards the colonial entanglements of British welfare state institutions. Nevertheless, mass higher education in the 1960s and 1970s tends to be considered as a universal service, unconnected to processes of racialisation and bordering. Sociologists discussing the neoliberal marketisation of higher education tend also not to draw connections between
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Time with houseplants: A sociological analysis of temporalities, affective entanglements and practices of care The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Giulia Carabelli, Dawn Lyon
This article contributes to a sociology of time and rhythm as well as a sociology of human–plant relations. It argues that sociology should take an interest in houseplants because studying human-plant relations in the domestic sphere offers novel possibilities for exploring wider sociological themes such as multispecies interactions, intimacy and identity as well as time and everyday life. The article
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Algorithmic control and resistance in the gig economy: A case of Uber drivers in Dhaka The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-26 Lutfun Nahar Lata
This article explores how Uber drivers in Dhaka exercise agency to earn and sustain their livelihoods. Uber drivers not only experience extortion by Uber, but also face various challenges, such as precarious working conditions and algorithmic control of their activities. In most Global South countries, the regulatory practices are not in favour of Uber drivers either. Within this context, drawing on
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“It’s Heartbreaking. It’s Expensive. It’s Hard”: How the Carceral Care Economy Harms Black and Latine Mothers Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-25 Raquel Delerme
While literature on mass incarceration has focused primarily on incarcerated men, their children, and their romantic partners, this article builds on a smaller body of work that highlights the harms to mothers under the constraints of the neoliberal carceral state. In this study, I examine how mothers with incarcerated adult children have been conscripted to perform extractive caring labor. Drawing
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Book Review: When Care Is Conditional: Immigrants and the U.S. Safety Net By Dani Carrillo When Care Is Conditional: Immigrants and the U.S. Safety Net. By CarrilloDani. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation, 2024, 212pp., $35.00 (paper or ebook). Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-25 Kristina M. Fullerton Rico
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Conceptualizing Job and Employment Concepts for Earnings Inequality Estimands With Linked Employer-Employee Data 1 Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-24 Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, Chen-Shuo Hong
We examine variations in pay gap estimates and inferences associated with distinct conceptualizations of jobs and employment contexts under legal and comparable worth theories of pay bias. We find that job titles produce smaller estimates of within job pay gaps than job groups, but the inferential importance of job concepts differs across organizational, workplace, and job groups within workplace units
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Large Language Models for Text Classification: From Zero-Shot Learning to Instruction-Tuning Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-24 Youngjin Chae, Thomas Davidson
Large language models (LLMs) have tremendous potential for social science research as they are trained on vast amounts of text and can generalize to many tasks. We explore the use of LLMs for supervised text classification, specifically the application to stance detection, which involves detecting attitudes and opinions in texts. We examine the performance of these models across different architectures
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Review of “When Rape Goes Viral: Youth and Sexual Assault in the Digital Age” Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-23 Anna Brasseur
This review explores Anna Gjika’s When Rape Goes Viral (2023), a sociological study of how digital technologies transform the dynamics of sexual violence among youth. Through detailed analysis of high-profile cases like Steubenville and Maryville, Gjika argues that social media not only amplifies rape culture but also shifts how consent, victimhood, and justice are perceived. The book examines the
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Book Review: From South Central to Southside: Gang Transnationalism, Masculinity, and Disorganized Violence in Belize City , By Adam Baird From South Central to Southside: Gang Transnationalism, Masculinity, and Disorganized Violence in Belize City. By BairdAdam. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 2024, 187 pp., $29.95 (paper); $94.50 (cloth). Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 Jade Levell
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Pursuing Gender Euphoria: A Model of Gender Dysphoria as a Social Process Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 Kai W. Mckinney, David G. Ortiz
Using data from a series of semi-structured interviews with gender-diverse participants, we propose reframing the phenomenon of gender dysphoria as part of a larger social process rooted in the pursuit of gender euphoria. Our findings suggest that gender dysphoria is the result of a social process of negotiating access to gender-euphoric desires across the macro, interactional, and individual levels
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The Target Study: A Conceptual Model and Framework for Measuring Disparity Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 John W. Jackson, Yea-Jen Hsu, Raquel C. Greer, Romsai T. Boonyasai, Chanelle J. Howe
We present a conceptual model to measure disparity—the target study—where social groups may be similarly situated (i.e., balanced) on allowable covariates. Our model, based on a sampling design, does not intervene to assign social group membership or alter allowable covariates. To address nonrandom sample selection, we extend our model to generalize or transport disparity or to assess disparity after
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Networks Beyond Categories: A Computational Approach to Examining Gender Homophily Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 Chen-Shuo Hong
Social networks literature has explored homophily, the tendency to associate with similar others, as a critical boundary-making process contributing to segregated networks along the lines of identities. Yet, social network research generally conceptualizes identities as sociodemographic categories and seldom considers the inherently continuous and heterogeneous nature of differences. Drawing upon the
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The Mixed Subjects Design: Treating Large Language Models as Potentially Informative Observations Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 David Broska, Michael Howes, Austin van Loon
Large language models (LLMs) provide cost-effective but possibly inaccurate predictions of human behavior. Despite growing evidence that predicted and observed behavior are often not interchangeable , there is limited guidance on using LLMs to obtain valid estimates of causal effects and other parameters. We argue that LLM predictions should be treated as potentially informative observations, while
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Violence as a Constitutive of States International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 A M Abozaid
Is the state monopoly on the use of legitimate violence a modern invention that refers exclusively to a particular provincial sociohistorical phenomenon that emerged in seventeenth-century Europe? The answer this paper presents is no. Instead, I argue that the canonical Eurocentric epistemic communities have sought to displace other systems of governance and administration and replace them with European
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The Labeling Power of Critical Race Theory: Evidence from a National Survey Experiment Sociol. Educ. (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 Andrew Myers, Crista Urena Hernandez
Discussions about educational content on race and racism have captured widespread public and political attention, with much of this debate falling under the umbrella of critical race theory (CRT). Despite this attention, we currently do not know whether it is the content in these lessons or the CRT label that is influencing opinion on this issue. Are critics of CRT reacting to the content that CRT
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Race and neoliberal citizenship in the construction of good (attachment) parents: Parenting Culture Studies and beyond The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-22 Patricia Hamilton, Charlotte Faircloth
In this article, we offer one example of what attending to race can bring to sociological analyses of parenting. We draw on literature from two fields, Parenting Culture Studies and Black Feminist scholarship, to bring their insights to bear on a project that examines black mothers’ engagements with attachment parenting. In addressing an analytical lacuna in the work on Parenting Culture Studies, we
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Correcting the Measurement Errors of AI-Assisted Labeling in Image Analysis Using Design-Based Supervised Learning Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Alessandra Rister Portinari Maranca, Jihoon Chung, Musashi Hinck, Adam D. Wolsky, Naoki Egami, Brandon M. Stewart
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) has shown incredible leaps in performance across data of a variety of modalities including texts, images, audio, and videos. This affords social scientists the ability to annotate variables of interest from unstructured media. While rapidly improving, these methods are far from perfect and, as we show, even ignoring the small amounts of error in high accuracy
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Machine Bias. How Do Generative Language Models Answer Opinion Polls? Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Julien Boelaert, Samuel Coavoux, ?tienne Ollion, Ivaylo Petev, Patrick Pr?g
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly presented as a potential substitute for humans, including as research subjects. However, there is no scientific consensus on how closely these in silico clones can emulate survey respondents. While some defend the use of these “synthetic users,” others point toward social biases in the responses provided by large language models (LLMs). In this
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Social Mobility as Causal Intervention Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Lai Wei, Yu Xie
The study of mobility effects is an important subject of study in sociology. Empirical investigations of individual mobility effects, however, have been hindered by one fundamental limitation, the unidentifiability of mobility effects when origin and destination are held constant. Given this fundamental limitation, we propose to reconceptualize mobility effects from the micro- to macro-level. Instead
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The Racial Visual Imaginary of International Relations International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Yoav Galai
Visual politics is a thriving subfield of international relations (IR) that traces its origin to the “visual turn” at the turn of the century. However, visual politics hardly engages with the central visuality of modernity: race. This article argues that visual politics has a longer history than the current disciplinary history suggests, and it deploys a sociographical analysis to explore the central
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Necropolitics and Necropolice: Death, Immortality, and Art-Activism in Russia International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-21 Vladimir Ogula
This article explores the affirmative dimension of necropolitics by looking at the articulation of the dead as an aesthetic and political subject in the work of the art-activist collective “the party of the dead.” Since 2017, their performances have exposed and challenged an aesthetic order based on the erasure of mortality in Russia. I draw on Rancière’s distinction between “politics” and “the police”
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The Insight-Inference Loop: Efficient Text Classification via Natural Language Inference and Threshold-Tuning Sociological Methods & Research (IF 6.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-19 Sandrine Chausson, Marion Fourcade, David J. Harding, Bj?rn Ross, Grégory Renard
Modern computational text classification methods have brought social scientists tantalizingly close to the goal of unlocking vast insights buried in text data—from centuries of historical documents to streams of social media posts. Yet three barriers still stand in the way: the tedious labor of manual text annotation, the technical complexity that keeps these tools out of reach for many researchers
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Explosive legacies: Gaza and colonial aphasia The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-19 Yasmin Gunaratnam
Israel’s deadly 2023 military assault on Gaza – recognised as genocide by humanitarian organisations – is at the heart of this article. We now know much more about the political economy of Israel’s settler colonialism, in which leading institutions in North America and Europe, including universities, are embedded. And yet our anticolonial solidarity remains at best glitchy and unreliable. Rather than
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The Politics of Fear and Hate: Experience, (De)Legitimization, and (De)Mobilization International Political Sociology (IF 3.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-17 C Nicolai L Gellwitzki
Critical security studies and emotion research in international relations have highlighted that the emotion of fear is a pivotal driver of material and psychological securitization processes and that political actors may attempt to instrumentalize fear to obtain their political objectives. This article suggests that complementing this focus on fear with closer attention to the emotion of hate provides
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Compartmentalizing Intersectionality: Feminist Translations in Anti-Racist and Anti-Rape Activism in Japan Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-16 Vivian Shaw, Kanoko Kamata
Feminists scholars based in the United States have long struggled with applying intersectionality to a transnational lens. This article explores intersectionality’s translations, drawing on two cases in Japan: the first, an anti-racism movement, and the second, a coalitional anti-rape campaign. We offer the concept of compartmentalizing intersectionality to describe the practices of prioritizing and
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Fractal scaling of feminist politics and the emergence of woman life freedom movement in Iran Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-16 Mahbubeh Moqadam
This article presents a socio-historical analysis of the ways women’s everyday resistance and struggles over several decades have contributed to the emergence of the Woman, Life, Freedom (WLF) movement in Iran. Drawing on archival and (digital) ethnographic data spanning from the mid-19th century to the 2022 WLF movement, I take a spatiotemporal approach to illustrate the evolution of feminist politics
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To the Fifties and Back Again? A Comparative Analysis of Changes in Breadwinning Arrangements during the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Four European Countries Work. Employ. Soc. (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-04-16 Giulia M Dotti Sani, Ariane Bertogg, Janna Besamusca, Mara A Yerkes, Anna Zamberlan
Over the past decades, opposite-sex couples have moved away from the traditional ‘male breadwinner model’ towards a more egalitarian division of paid work. However, lockdown measures and the closures of schools and childcare services during the COVID-19 pandemic may have challenged egalitarian divisions of paid work, pushing couples into traditional breadwinning arrangements. This study investigates
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Book Review: Sex in Canada: The Who, Why, When, and How of Getting Down Up North By Tina Fetner Sex in Canada: The Who, Why, When, and How of Getting Down Up North. By FetnerTina. Vancouver, BC, Canada: University of British Columbia Press, 2024, 204 pp., CA $75.00 (cloth); CA $32.95 (paper). Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-15 Ellen Lamont
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OUTSIDER EXEMPTION: Transgender Migrants and Gender Accountability in South Korea Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-04-12 Chelle Jones
“Doing gender” has been explored in a variety of contexts. However, accountability to gender is understudied, leading scholars to call for work that analyzes the varying salience of gender accountability. I respond by studying transgender and gender-nonconforming (TGNC+) migrants originally from the West and Southeast Asia who now live in South Korea. How do TGNC+ migrants experience accountability
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Freedom and unfreedom in au pairing: Probing unfree labour from the perspective of social reproduction The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-12 Elisabeth Wide
How does affectivity align with the practice and experience of unfree labour? Recent studies have examined unfree labour as a political economic problem; however, the scholarship has largely overlooked the involvement of affect and social obligations in labour unfreedom, inadvertently constructing an imaginary of an insentient labouring body. I apply the case of au pairing to consider the affective
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Emotion work, affect and intergenerational ties: Understanding children’s engagement with therapeutic culture The Sociological Review (IF 2.1) Pub Date : 2025-04-12 Malene Lue Kessing
Therapeutic culture has penetrated several spheres of social life, offering concepts, categories and metaphors to make sense of selfhood and the social world. This article contributes to sociological discussions of therapeutic culture by exploring children’s diverse therapeutic engagements through an investigation of support groups for children of parents with mental illness. Empirically, the article
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The politics of the Norwegian capitalist class: the inner circle and wealthy owners Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-10 Marte Lund Saga
This paper investigates the political activities of different segments within the capitalist class, comparing an inner circle of interlocked directors to a list of Norwegian wealthy owners. Drawing on a unique dataset that combines data on corporate boards with political participation records, the study compares wealthy owners and an “inner circle” of corporate directors. The findings reveal a division
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Political Minority Identity Maintenance and Parenting in a Rural Small Town☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-09 Laura Backstrom
Although place‐based partisanship is well‐documented, few scholars explore political polarization within rural communities or how political minorities survive conformity pressures in small towns. Drawing on interviews with 21 parents who reside in a predominantly conservative, rural community in Northern Appalachia, this study uses an identity‐based model of culture in action to analyze how political
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Evidence for the welfare magnet hypothesis? A global examination using exponential random graph models Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-08 Tim S Müller
The welfare magnet hypothesis states that welfare generosity in destination countries is a migration pull factor. However, supporting evidence is mixed. Previous research has focused on explanatory factors in destination countries rather than in origin countries, examined migration from Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development country perspectives rather than from a global perspective
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Not paying unto Caesar: Christian nationalism, politics, race, and opposition to taxation Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-07 Samuel L Perry, Ruth Braunstein
Americans’ views on taxation exercise a powerful influence on political outcomes. Yet these views cannot be solely attributed to partisanship or even racial or economic self-interest. Recent work on the cultural sociology of taxation stresses that Americans’ views on taxes are shaped by their understanding of proper social order. Integrating these insights with burgeoning work on Christian nationalism
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Welfare benefit cuts in early childhood and future educational outcomes: a natural experiment Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-06 Dana Shay, Esther Adi-Japha, Yossi Shavit
Understanding the long-term effect of early childhood poverty on a child’s life prospects presents a methodological challenge due to the potential endogeneity of family income, making it difficult to establish a clear causal relationship. This study addresses this challenge by exploiting a natural experiment: a major reduction in child allowances and income support benefits for families with young
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It is not what you weigh, it is how you present it: body size, attractiveness, physical functioning, and access to partnership and sexuality for older men and women Social Forces (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-06 Yiang Li, Linda J Waite
Physical attractiveness has been linked to better economic, dyadic, and health outcomes but is understudied. We focus here on the gendered implications of attractiveness for one component of social well-being, access to intimate partnership and sexuality, among older adults. In addition, we examine the role of body size, as measured and rated by an observer, in evaluating attractiveness and the diverging
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Residents' Perceptions of a Future Olympic Bid in Heber, Utah* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2025-04-02 Haylie M. June, Michael R. Cope, Sydney Hawkins, Scott R. Sanders, Aaron Hunter
This study seeks to investigate residents' support for a future Winter Olympic host bid in Heber, Utah, a growing rural community about 45 miles from Salt Lake City. Specifically, we examine how feelings toward one's community and feelings toward Salt Lake City's hosting of the 2002 Winter Olympics predict support for a future Olympic bid. In order to investigate our research question, we use data
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Book Review: On The Wrong Side: How Universities Protect Perpetrators and Betray Survivors of Sexual Violence , By Nicole Bedera and Hear Our Stories: Campus Sexual Violence, Intersectionality, and How We Build a Better University , By Jessica C. Harris On The Wrong Side: How Universities Protect Perpetrators and Betray Survivors of Sexual Violence. By BederaNicole. Berkeley, CA: University of California Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-26 Heather R. Hlavka
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Empowered by Adversity? Exit, Voice, and Silence in the Aftermath of Gender Discrimination at Work Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-26 Claire Corsten, Rebecca Daviddi, Jan Doering
Social psychological research suggests that workplace discrimination harms women’s self-confidence and mental health, which may lead them to remain silent or quit their jobs after facing discrimination. However, feminist scholarship argues that discrimination can generate feminist consciousness and resistance. To interrogate these conflicting expectations, we draw on in-depth interviews with professional
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Guidance Counseling Can Reduce Inequality in University Enrollment in Germany: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial Sociol. Educ. (IF 3.3) Pub Date : 2025-03-25 Irena Pietrzyk, Melinda Erdmann, Juliana Schneider, Marita Jacob, Marcel Helbig
Guidance counseling is well known to foster enrollment in higher education among students from low social origins in the United States and Canada. However, because students in these North American countries face obstacles that do not exist in many European countries, generalizing previous findings to the European context is difficult. Against this background, we use a randomized controlled trial to
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The Sequential Rise of Female Religious Leadership Sociological Science (IF 2.7) Pub Date : 2025-03-20 Jeremy Senn, J?rg Stolz
In his seminal work 'Ordaining Women,' Mark Chaves (1997b) highlighted the phenomenon of 'loose coupling' regarding female religious leadership: congregations often display inconsistencies between their stated policies and actual practices. Some congregations declare openness to female leadership but do not practice it, whereas others officially forbid female leadership yet have women in leadership
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Book Review: Sex Work Today: Erotic Labor in the Twenty-First Century , Edited by Bernadette Barton, Barbara G. Brents, and Angela Jones Sex Work Today: Erotic Labor in the Twenty-First Century. Edited by BartonBernadetteBrentsBarbara G.JonesAngela. New York, NY: New York University Press, 2024, 428 pp., $99.00 (cloth); $35.00 (paper). Gender & Society (IF 7.2) Pub Date : 2025-03-20 Tuulia Law