Monthly Archives: January 2008

fat in the fire?

Article: “Fat in the Fire? Science, the News Media, and the ‘Obesity Epidemic’.” Sociological Forum 23(1): 53-83.

Summary: Watch out for news reporting on weight gain and health crisis – you might be blaming yourself for recent weight gains more than you should. While the news media and medical science publications share much in their reports on obesity and health, news media dramatize the issue more, highlight our individual responsibilities more, and blame particularly the poor, racial minorities, and women more, Saguy and Almeling (Sociological Forum 2008) find. The exponential growths of reports on obesity and weight since 1980 are the same in both medical and news publications, but the news media have continued to beat the medical publication in the article counts since the mid-1990s. The expansion of media coverage and the preferred use of sensational words like “crisis” and “epidemic” might be flaring the issue of fat in the fire.

Bill O’Reilly may be slightly incorrect

Article: Dynamics of Political Polarization. American Sociological Review, October 2007

Summary: This article deals with two “puzzling paradoxes.” The first is the simultaneous absence and presence of attitude polarization; the notion that global attitude polarization if rare, yet pundits typically describe it as commonplace. The second is the simultaneous presence and absence of social polarization; while individuals typically have very little difference in attitude from those that make up their social/interpersonal networks, their larger networks are nonetheless characterized by considerable differences in attitude. These paradoxes are resolved through the understanding of a few key concepts. The first is what the authors term “take off” issues: those issues that for a very short period demand attention and appaear to radically polarize the populus, such as the Iraq war or  stem cell research. It is also essential to understand that not only may  people have conflicting views and opinions  in their own thoughts, people are highly selective in the issues they discuss with others. As such, people are much less likely to discuss “takeoff” issues with those whose opinions they are unfamiliar with or knowingly opposed to. In combination, these factors explain why people see so little polarization in their day-to-day lives, et hear so much about the polarized world they live in from television commentators.

To Label or Not to Label: Felony Style

Article: The Labeling of Convicted Felons and Its Consequences for Recidivism. Criminology, August 2007

Summary: Florida law allows judges to withhold adjudication of quilt for people found guilty of a felony and sentenced to probation. In effect, these individual’s records do not reflect the felony at all; they lose no civil rights and may lawfully claim they have enevr been convicted of a felony. To test the power of the felony label, the authors looked at nearly 96,000 felony cases in Florida and compared those who were given adjudication and those who were not. Their study finds that those who receive the formal label of felon are significantly more likely to commit another crime in the next two years that those who do not, even when controlling for multiple location characteristics (crime rate, relative poverty rate, etc.). The effect of the label is found to be stronger for whites and females, as well as those who had reached the age of 30 with no prior convictions. The authors point to ways in which the judicious use of the adjucation process can reduce harm not only at the individual level, but at the societal level as well.

Religion and Segregation

Article: Conservative Protestant Congregations and Racial Residential Segregation:Evaluating the Closed Community Thesis in Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Counties. American Sociological Review, June, 2007.

Summary: This article tests the hypothesis that the number of Conservative Protestant congregations per 1,000 non-Hispanic whites is directly associated with the level of residential segregation between whites and blacks. The author finds that levels of segregation correspond positively with the presence of Conservative Protestant congregations and is consistnet across a variety of both urban and rural locales. Blanchard (the author) argues that this takes place not simply because of racial intolerance (though he admits this may have some impact in these congregations), but rather because of the closed nature of these groups and a strong focus on in-group relationships. Unlike other major Christian denominations, Conservative Protestans eschew programs and services that reach out to non-members and instead emphasize in-groupt ties and relationships. Furthermore, while other churches may serve as the meeting point for different races and thus act as a springboard toward integration, the closed nature of Conservative Protestant congregations serves to strengthen, not weaken, excisting social cleavages.

Uncle Sam Wants You

Article: Joining up: Did military service in the early all volunteer era affect subsequent civilian income? Social Science Research, December 2007

Summary: “The military has historically been the single largest employer of young men and the largest vocational training institution in the nation.” So how are the benefits? Jay Teachman and Lucky Tedrow examine the long-term impact of military service on men’s income and find that military service gives young men from disadvantaged backgrounds an income boost while they’re active, but things tend to even out for enlistees once discharged. Furthermore, white veterans with at least a high school degree suffer an income deficit when compared to their civilian counterparts.

“Nearly two decades following discharge from the military (and net of many important controls, including several attempts to adjust for selectivity), better educated White veterans earn about 87% of the income enjoyed by their nonveteran counterparts. Thus, on the face of the matter, military service does not appear to be a wise economic choice for many men who could otherwise do better by remaining in the civilian labor market. They lose critical labor market experience and likely lose important information about job networks.”

The noteworthy exception to this trend is that Blacks with less than a high school education receive an income premium from their service. These results have important implications for military recruitment efforts.

Links Between Relationship Status and Breastfeeding

Article: The Association of Couples’ Relationship Status and Quality with Breastfeeding Initiation Journal of Marriage and Family, December 2007

Summary: In a recent study, Christina M. Gibson-Davis and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn weigh in on the growing debate over whether diverse family forms influence child well-being. Looking at data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Survey, the authors examine the links between relationship status, relationship quality, and race and ethnicity in breastfeeding initiation. In line with previous findings, the authors conclude that married women are more likely to breastfeed than mothers in other family forms. At the same time, however, the variability between cohabiting, non-cohabiting partners, and non-romantically involved parents should not be downplayed. Another noteworthy finding is that non-married mothers who received paternal financial support during pregnancy were half as likely to breastfeed. Among non-married African American mothers, paternal emotional support also decreased the likelihood of breastfeeding by 28%.

Phone surveys in a wireless world

Article: Coverage Bias in Traditional Telephone Surveys of Low-Income and Young Adults Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 71, no. 5

Summary: This article finds that surveys that rely on traditional random-digit-dials of landlines have a significant bias in their information about low-income young people. Because 32% of low-income young adults live in households with only a wireless phone, telephone surveys that do not include cell phones will understimate the prevalence of binge drinking and smoking, but will overestimate obesity. These surveys will also underestimate physical activity and the prevalence of HIV testing. This article is part of a special issue on telephone surveys and cell phones in the United States.

Two Worlds Apart?

Article: Support Between Siblings and Between Friends: Two Worlds Apart? Journal of Marriage and Family, December 2007

Summary: Using data from a Dutch survey study, Marieke Voorpostel and Tanja Van Der Lippe examine how the type of support received differs between friends and siblings. The authors find that, on average, siblings exchange more practical support - such as housework or transportation - while friends exchange more emotional support. An intriguing finding is that geographical distance has a negative effect on the exchange of practical support, but was positively related with the exchange of emotional support. In other words, the authors explain:

The further siblings and friends lived apart, the more likely emotional support was received.

the revolution will be blogged… from work?

Article: Diary of a working boy: Creative resistance among anonymous workbloggers Ethnography, Vol. 8, no. 4

Summary: This study of workbloggers in Manchester asserts that contrary to common perceptions that white collar workers are disinterested in social change, workers who blog about their jobs have subversive political potential even while participating in the corporate capitalist system.

Abstract:

Anonymous workbloggers – employees who write online
diaries about their work – are often simultaneously productive workers and savage critics of the organizational cultures in which they toil. This research focuses on a small group of white-collar workers from the Greater Manchester and Lancashire area, who risk their jobs by writing publicly about their office experiences under assumed identities. Countering the notion that resistance to corporate culture leads to ‘confusion and emptiness’ (Willmott, 1993: 538), this study contributes to the recent revival of interest in worker misbehavior and recalcitrance. By focusing on workers as authors, it addresses a shortcoming in the existing critical literature, which treats informal employee resistance as an intellectually and artistically unsophisticated phenomenon. Drawing parallels with the lives and work of authors such as Franz Kafka and T.S. Eliot, it evaluates whether embedded writers, in spite of their ambivalence about the alternative, can constitute an effective counter-hegemonic force.

“Schooling is not a panacea” in Rural India

Article: “Spoiled Sons” and “Sincere Daughters”: Schooling, Security, and Empowerment in Rural West Bengal, India Signs, 2008, vol. 33, no. 2

Summary: This article is an ethnographic study of the effects of schooling in rural West Bengal, India. Beginning with Amartya Sen’s claim that access to schooling, particularly for girl children, will unproblematically increase women’s empowerment and improve gender equality, Dia Da Costa examines how schooling is actually changing gender relations on the ground, including how the effect of schooling is shaped by the expectations of other social institutions like marriage and the family. Da Costa elaborates:

Apart from grounding analyses of schooling enrollment initiatives within familial trajectories and relations, we must also situate them in employment rates for men and women, average marriage ages, divorce rates, trends in violence against women, and displacement from agricultural work. These rates and trends must be viewed as educational issues since the ability to provide for parents, children, and wives is a concrete expected outcome of schooling.

The author concludes that while neither she nor her informants question that schooling and literacy provide benefits, there may also be significant costs in the form of conflicting institutional expectations:

In West Bengal, where concerted efforts in economic redistribution and political decentralization have been made, the alienation, insecurity, and marginalization represented in words of parents and young men and women are haunting. Acquiring schooling is significant for girls, but its associations with empowerment and security must be measured in context. Where there has been little direct redistributive benefit to women and increasing violence against them, for the intervener asking why she cannot be someone’s future, schooling is but one fraction of a necessary institutional response. Lack of redistributive equality, the threat of violence, and marital desertion also mark the ways women construct the meaning and value of their schooling. However, how should young men with their school certificates in hand belong to their families and communities as notional bearers of future security? Young men in rural Bengal have had patriarchal protections of all sorts and live in a state with a pro‐poor government that has been working for the benefit of historically disadvantaged people. Undoubtedly, alienation marks these men’s present experience since for the young man asking why he cannot be someone’s future there is no available institutional response.