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Cardona, Andrés: Social closure in markets, families, and networks: explaining the emergence of intergroup inequality as a result of exclusionary action across context [...]. 2015
Inhalt
Introduction: mechanisms, inequality, and closure
I. Social mechanisms
1 Social mechanisms and mechanistic explanations in sociology
1.1 Philosophical considerations
1.1.1 Mechanisms: metaphysical issues
1.1.2 Mechanistic explanations: epistemological concerns
1.2 The sociological reception
1.2.1 Leading advocates of a mechanistic approach in sociology
1.2.2 Difficulties in implementing a mechanistic approach
1.3 Taking stock: why and how mechanisms in sociology?
1.3.1 Which are the advantages of adopting a mechanistic approach?
1.3.2 Which are the core elements of the mechanistic approach and how should they be put into practice?
1.4 Summary
II. Defining social closure
2 Weber's definition of closure
2.1 Group closure
2.2 Market closure
2.3 An example: Accountants in UK between 1957 and 1970
2.4 Is closing the market independent from closing the group?
2.5 Why were the two meanings of closure conflated in the first place?
2.6 Summary
3 A new definition: closure as exclusionary action
3.1 The neo-Weberian conceptual expansion: Parkin and Murphy
3.1.1 Parkin: the role of unintended consequences
3.1.2 Murphy: from explanation to mere description
3.2 The demands of empirical research on the concept of closure: Tilly and Roscigno
3.2.1 Tilly's relaxation of collective actors
3.2.2 Roscigno's emphasis on individual agency and interaction
3.3 Closure as exclusionary action
3.3.1 A general, action-based definition of closure
3.3.2 Forms of closure as exclusionary action: motives and forms of interaction
3.3.3 Further examples
3.3.4 The `closure space'
3.4 Summary
III. Closure and inequality in markets, families, and networks
4 Closure in markets: closing the group or the market?
4.1 Individual and group competition: four causal paths
4.2 Model description
4.2.1 Overview
4.2.2 Design concepts
4.2.3 Details
4.2.4 Submodels
4.3 Experimental design
4.4 Results
4.4.1 Pure individual competition
4.4.2 Individual competition through group membership
4.4.3 Group competition through group closure
4.4.4 Pure group competition through market closure
4.4.5 All processes at the same time
4.5 Summary
5 Closure in families: parental choices and children's skills
5.1 Beyond optimizing parents: heuristics and norms
5.1.1 Heuristics
5.1.2 Norms
5.2 Model description
5.2.1 Overview
5.2.2 Design concepts
5.2.3 Details
5.2.4 Submodels
5.3 Experimental design
5.4 Results
5.4.1 Experiment 1: egalitarian vs. non-egalitarian parents
5.4.2 Experiment 2: egalitarian vs. optimizing parents
5.5 Validation
5.6 Summary
6 Closure in networks: language skills and friendship ties
6.1 Data and measures
6.1.1 Site
6.1.2 Data
6.1.3 Measures
6.1.4 Missing data
6.2 Methods: exponential random graph models (ERGM)
6.3 Results
6.3.1 Descriptive and bivariate results
6.3.2 ERGM: maximum likelihood estimates (MLE)
6.3.3 ERGM: Bayesian estimates with imputed data
6.3.4 Sensitivity analysis: higher-order parameters
6.3.5 Discussion: the effect of language on tie formation
6.4 Summary
IV. Concluding remarks
7 What have we learned? The path ahead
7.1 Main contributions
7.2 The future of a mechanistic agenda in sociology
7.3 Closure as an explanation of intergroup inequality
List of references
Declaration of honesty