排序方式: 共有3条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1
1.
This article engages with problems that are usually opaque: What trajectories do scientific debates assume, when does a scientific community consider a proposition to be a fact, and how can we know that? We develop a strategy for evaluating the state of scientific contestation on issues. The analysis builds from Latour's black box imagery, which we observe in scientific citation networks. We show that as consensus forms, the importance of internal divisions to the overall network structure declines. We consider substantive cases that are now considered facts, such as the carcinogenicity of smoking and the non-carcinogenicity of coffee. We then employ the same analysis to currently contested cases: the suspected carcinogenicity of cellular phones, and the relationship between vaccines and autism. Extracting meaning from the internal structure of scientific knowledge carves a niche for renewed sociological commentary on science, revealing a typology of trajectories that scientific propositions may experience en route to consensus. 相似文献
2.
3.
It is often asserted that the gender gap in educational attainment is larger for blacks than whites, but historical trends
comparing the black and white gender gap have received surprisingly little attention. Analysis of historical data from the
U.S. census IPUMS samples shows that the gender gap in college completion has evolved differently for whites and blacks. Historically,
the female advantage in educational attainment among blacks is linked to more favorable labor market opportunities and stronger
incentives for employment for educated black women. Blacks, particularly black males, still lag far behind whites in their
rates of college completion, but the striking educational gains of white women have caused the racial patterns of gender differences
in college completion rates to grow more similar over time. While some have linked the disadvantaged position of black males
to their high risk of incarceration, our estimates suggest that incarceration has a relatively small impact on the black gender
gap and the racial gap in college completion rates for males in the United States. 相似文献
1