Emily Smith-Greenaway,Ashton M Verdery,Deborah Carr
Emily Smith-Greenaway
Bereavement-the loss of a loved one through death-is a common and consequential life course experience. Although bereavement, and matters of death and dying more generally, have long remained on the margins of sociology, in the wake of cont...
Presumed Competent: The Strategic Adaptation of Asian Americans in Education and the Labor Market [0.03%]
被假定的能力:美籍亚裔在教育和劳动力市场中的战略适应
Jennifer Lee,Kimberly Goyette,Xi Song et al.
Jennifer Lee et al.
Presumed competent, Asian Americans exhibit the highest level of education and median household income of all major US ethnoracial groups. On average, they outpace all groups in the domain of education, yet they do not maintain their advant...
Stephen T Russell,Meg D Bishop,Jessica N Fish
Stephen T Russell
Sexual identity labels and meanings have been expanding. We explore how sexual identities are taking shape, intertwining, and emerging in new forms among a growing number of LGBTQ+ people (i.e., lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, a...
Leveraging Experience Sampling/Ecological Momentary Assessment for Sociological Investigations of Everyday Life [0.03%]
利用经验抽样和生态瞬时评估法进行社会学日常生活调查
Christopher R Browning,Nicolo P Pinchak,Catherine A Calder et al.
Christopher R Browning et al.
Experience sampling (ES) - also referred to as ecological momentary assessment (EMA) - is a data collection method that involves asking study participants to report on their thoughts, feelings, behaviors, activities, and environments in (or...
Jennie E Brand,Xiang Zhou,Yu Xie
Jennie E Brand
This article reviews recent advances in causal inference relevant to sociology. We focus on a selective subset of contributions aligning with four broad topics: causal effect identification and estimation in general, causal effect heterogen...
Melanie M Hughes,Pamela Paxton,Mona Lena Krook
Melanie M Hughes
The global proliferation of quotas for women over the past 30 years is both remarkable and consequential. Targeting decision-making positions historically resistant to women's equal inclusion, the adoption of electoral and corporate board q...
Susan E Short,Meghan Zacher
Susan E Short
Women's health, and what we know about it, are influenced by social factors. From the exclusion of women's bodies in medical research, to the silence and stigma of menstruation and menopause, to the racism reflected in maternal mortality, t...
Debra Umberson,Rachel Donnelly
Debra Umberson
Social isolation is a potent predictor of poor health, mortality, and dementia risk. A great deal of research across national contexts provides causal evidence for these linkages and identifies key explanatory mechanisms through which isola...
Stress-Related Biosocial Mechanisms of Discrimination and African American Health Inequities [0.03%]
歧视的应激相关生物社会机制及其与美国非裔人群健康差距的关系
Bridget J Goosby,Jacob E Cheadle,Colter Mitchell
Bridget J Goosby
This review describes stress-related biological mechanisms linking interpersonal racism to life course health trajectories among African Americans. Interpersonal racism, a form of social exclusion enacted via discrimination, remains a salie...
Michael C Lens
Michael C Lens
Zoning determines what can be built where, and is ubiquitous in the United States. Low-density residential zoning predominates in US cities far more than in other countries, limiting housing opportunities for those who cannot afford large h...