Theoretical and political perspectives of American sociologists in the 1990s |
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Authors: | Stephen K Sanderson Lee Ellis |
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Institution: | (1) Indiana University of Pennsylvania, 15705 Indiana, PA |
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Abstract: | This study investigated the theoretical allegiances of a national sample of 168 sociologists. Conflict theory and Marxism,
symbolic interactionism, functionalism, and eclecticism were the approaches most widely adhered to by our respondents. Nonetheless,
the respondents claimed allegiance to a wide range of perspectives, suggesting that contemporary sociology is, as long suspected,
highly fragmented theoretically. A special concern of the study was to determine the degree to which sociologists identify
biological factors as important determinants of social behavior. The respondents were highly antibiological in outlook, with
more than half attributing only 15 percent or less of the variation in 12 dimensions of social behavior to biological causes.
We also explored the degree to which four variables—age, gender, institutional affiliation, and political outlook—were correlated
with the respondents’ theoretical preferences and the importance they gave to biological causation. Political outlook was
the best predictor of the respondents’ theoretical outlooks, followed fairly closely by age. Institutional affiliation was
a weak predictor of theoretical outlook, and gender was completely unrelated to theory choice and perception of the importance
of biological causation.
where he specailizes in social theory and comparative macrosociology. He is the author ofMacrosociology: An Introduction to Human Societies (Harper Collins, 2nd ed., 1991) andSocial Evolutionism: A Critical History (Basil Blackwell, 1990). He is currently working on a sequel to the latter of these. Lee Ellis is professor of sociology
at Minot State University. He is the author ofTheories of Rape (Hemisphere, 1989) and of two forthcoming works,Research Methods in the Social Sciences (Wm. C. Brown, 1993) and the two-volume seriesSocial Stratification and Socioeconomic Inequality (Praeger, 1993). |
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