ABSTRACTThe findings of this article emerge from an eight-month study examining career identity practices amongst a select group of fitness professionals in the U.K. We examine how the inter-relationship between physical and social space can denote how power is acquired, displayed, and used by individuals interacting in a shared space. The findings show that power is signified through spatial practices as individuals negotiate through triadic space, creating an identity of space and place for both trainer and client that identifies power, and signifies who has power. Fitness professionals with high levels of symbolic power are able to subvert organizational spatial norms to better serve themselves and their clients, while those with lower levels of symbolic power are forced to, or choose to, negotiate or abdicate space to others. These findings are relevant to a wide range of occupations where self-employment and contract workers interact in shared space. 相似文献
Motivated by the study of traffic accidents on a road network, we discuss the estimation of the relative risk, the ratio of rates of occurrence of different types of events occurring on a network of lines. Methods developed for two-dimensional spatial point patterns can be adapted to a linear network, but their requirements and performance are very different on a network. Computation is slow and we introduce new techniques to accelerate it. Intensities (occurrence rates) are estimated by kernel smoothing using the heat kernel on the network. The main methodological problem is bandwidth selection. Binary regression methods, such as likelihood cross-validation and least squares cross-validation, perform tolerably well in our simulation experiments, but the Kelsall–Diggle density-ratio cross-validation method does not. We find a theoretical explanation, and propose a modification of the Kelsall–Diggle method which has better performance. The methods are applied to traffic accidents in a regional city, and to protrusions on the dendritic tree of a neuron.
Employment services are commonly provided in network settings, but it is rare to find social policy analyses of how unemployed people search for jobs through networks. In a germinal analysis of social networks and employment, Mark Granovetter argued that “weak ties” (less familiar contacts) are more important to finding employment than are “strong ties” (family and friends). This is because weak ties provide more novel job-relevant information. Scholarship since Granovetter has predominantly supported the opposite argument, namely, that strong ties are more important for the unemployed, because they are more plentiful and thus provide more information in aggregate. Findings are also generally coloured by the focus being on “informal” networks or personal contacts. “Formal” networks, as represented most cogently by employment service providers, are absent or underestimated in most social network studies. On the basis of a qualitative study of 80 long-term unemployed people in Australia, incorporating analysis of both informal and formal networks, we argue that although “strong informal” ties are vital to job search, it is also important to consider “weak formal” ties, which can be complementary if and where service organizations are able to supply positive case management experiences. 相似文献
Analysis of a large micro-data set shows that state public-sector bargaining laws significantly influence state and local
government union membership in several ways. Membership probability is lowest where a right-to-work law is present; it is
greatest when there are mandatory agency shop provisions. Compulsory arbitration leads to a significantly greater probability
of membership than does the right-to-strike. Simulations based on model estimates indicate that policy changes along the lines
of proposed national public bargaining laws could lead to major changes in public-sector union density. Among individual and
demographic characteristics, membership probability is significantly affected by full-time/part-time status and the statewide
extent of private-sector unionism. Although non-whites and males are more likely to be union members, race and gender membership
differentials are shown to be relatively small.
The author thanks Jack Fiorito, Paul Jarley, Joe Stone, and Rob Valletta for their helpful comments. Any remaining errors
are his sole responsibility. 相似文献
The number of cities that negotiate collectively with their police officers has grown rapidly in recent decades, but union penetration has been uneven. This paper tries to identify some of the factors which led to collective negotiations. A model designed to predict formal negotiations is tested using both logit and discriminant analysis. The results indicate that environmental factors and dissatisfaction with working conditions are significant influences on unionization. Far less important is the desire to maintain salaries above market levels. Evidence of state enabling laws contribute little to overall prediction once other factors are considered. 相似文献
This paper examines the net effect of unions on productivity in the commercial banking industry. The focus of the study is
on three methodological issues. First, an attempt is made to determine whether individual unions have a differential impact
on banking productivity. The influence of unions on output per man-hour was initially estimated by including a union dummy
variable in a Cobb-Douglas formulation of bank production. Separate binary variables were then entered into alternative specifications
of the model to test the heterogeneity hypothesis. This hypothesis postulates differential productivity effects among the
individual unions operating in the commercial banking sector. Second, the sample banks were paired on a case-by-case basis
to assure the homogeneity of the two groupings: i.e., union and nonunion. Sample homogeneity is necessary because of the assumptions
of identical production functions and output prices between the groups. Third, a complete covariance model was specified in
order to estimate the impact of unionization on each parameter of the production function. In general, the unionized banks
were less productive than their nonunion peers. It should be noted, however, that the standard errors were large in all the
specifications. Moreover, the labor relations problems associated with one union had a large impact on the sector results. 相似文献
We investigated whether people were accurate at judging other people's status, what behavioral and appearance cues they relied on when assessing status, whether the way those cues were used was accurate, and whether target gender affected any of the results. Targets (N = 48) were university employees (faculty and staff) who were photographed while interacting with a coworker. One sample of perceivers (66 females, 42 males) rated the relative status of the two people in the photograph to each other, and another sample (60 females and males) rated each target in the photograph on status. Additionally, an array of behavioral and appearance cues of targets in the photograph was assessed. Results showed that (1) people were able to assess status in others, (2) the cues they used to assess female and male targets were somewhat different, and (3) how much people relied on specific cues corresponded to how status was expressed in these cues. 相似文献