Sociology: Rules, Roles, and RelationshipsDorsey Press, 1971 - 687 páginas |
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Página xiv
... institutions : family and religion , family and work relationships . Education as an inducting institution . The ... institutions to allocate scarce goods Work as a social arrangement . Questions a sociologist might ask . Three universal ...
... institutions : family and religion , family and work relationships . Education as an inducting institution . The ... institutions to allocate scarce goods Work as a social arrangement . Questions a sociologist might ask . Three universal ...
Página 392
... institutions are rooted in the fundamental na- ture of human relationships . Each generates social unity and so- cial strain , change and disruption . Each penetrates other realms of social life , connects with other institutions ...
... institutions are rooted in the fundamental na- ture of human relationships . Each generates social unity and so- cial strain , change and disruption . Each penetrates other realms of social life , connects with other institutions ...
Página 393
... institutions hang on a framework of rules . Church and government are two institutions whose end products are rules and their enforcement . * The rules we call creeds and codes and laws . These we find everywhere . But they are ...
... institutions hang on a framework of rules . Church and government are two institutions whose end products are rules and their enforcement . * The rules we call creeds and codes and laws . These we find everywhere . But they are ...
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Términos y frases comunes
achievement American attitudes behavior beliefs birth Catholics Census characteristics Charles Horton Cooley child church cial common complex conceptions culture defined demographic dependent dependent variable differentiated dimensions distribution Durkheim effect Emile Durkheim example expectations fertility Figure function Georg Simmel Gerhard Lenski homogamy human group human relationships Ibid immigration income increase individual influence institutions integration Jews Kingsley Davis labor force living male marriage Max Weber means measures ment mobility moral Negro newcomer norms number of persons observation occupation organization parents patterns percent political population population pyramid position problem production Protestant Protestantism religion religious requires roles rules Ruth Benedict score significant social order social structure society sociologist Sociology status suggest suicide rates symbols Table Talcott Parsons teachers things tion traits U.S. Government United values variables vary women workers York