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  Subjects -> SOCIOLOGY (Total: 553 journals)
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Sociological Theory
Journal Prestige (SJR): 1.641
Citation Impact (citeScore): 2
Number of Followers: 31  
 
  Hybrid Journal Hybrid journal (It can contain Open Access articles)
ISSN (Print) 0735-2751 - ISSN (Online) 1467-9558
Published by Sage Publications Homepage  [1176 journals]
  • Charismatic Mimicry: Innovation and Imitation in the Case of Volodymyr
           Zelensky

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      Authors: Paul Joosse, Dominik Zelinsky
      Abstract: Sociological Theory, Ahead of Print.
      Moving beyond frameworks of charisma scholarship that stress antagonism between charisma and establishment society, this article discerns and theoretically accounts for more mutualistic forms of influence between charismatic leaders and elite representatives of traditional or rational-legal institutions. Specifically, we combine contemporary work in the cultural sociology of charisma with Girard’s notion of mimesis to provide a theory of charismatic mimicry; we explain situations where, rather than opposing the charismatic leader, elites align themselves with the new sources of legitimacy being proffered by the charismatic leader. At times, these institutional elites even co-opt new charismatic protocols into their own vocabularies of leadership. We demonstrate the usefulness of our model for interpreting the case of the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and his encounters with European leaders.
      Citation: Sociological Theory
      PubDate: 2023-06-03T06:34:14Z
      DOI: 10.1177/07352751231174436
       
  • Exit, Voice, and Gender

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      Authors: Rogers Brubaker
      Abstract: Sociological Theory, Ahead of Print.
      Albert Hirschman’s exit-voice paradigm provides a useful lens for analyzing the current neo-categorical phase of gender politics in which attention has shifted from the content of the binary gender categories to the structure of the gender category system. During this phase of categorical destabilization, exit from originally assigned categories—in bureaucratically recorded, statistically reported, and informally negotiated forms—has become culturally legitimate and institutionally supported in a broadening range of milieus. Hirschman’s paradigm brings into focus the selectivity of exit and its potentially—and paradoxically—stabilizing consequences for the traditional gender order. The increased ease and pronounced selectivity of exit can channel dissatisfaction with gender arrangements into exit rather than voice or—as exit may itself be a form of voice—into individualized, psychologically driven forms of voice. And the selective exit of gender-nonconforming individuals from originally assigned categories can reinforce the stereotypical associations of these categories with gender conformity.
      Citation: Sociological Theory
      PubDate: 2023-05-11T12:40:48Z
      DOI: 10.1177/07352751231169955
       
  • Unmasked: A History of the Individualization of Risk

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      Authors: Greta R. Krippner
      Abstract: Sociological Theory, Ahead of Print.
      In this article, I explore how risk transformed from being understood as a property of groups to being understood as a property of individuals by examining the history of public and private insurance in the United States. Rather than locate changes in how risk is managed in our society in the “great risk shift” that occurred with the emergence of neoliberalism, I suggest the individualization of risk in recent decades is only the latest instantiation of a recurrent conflict between security and freedom that has marked the evolution of capitalism. Seen from this longer historical perspective, the “personal responsibility revolution” appears not as the handiwork of neoliberal policymakers but, rather, as the unintended result of social movements that contested discriminatory practices in insurance markets. Thus, paradoxically, my account suggests that struggles against discrimination seeded the individualization of risk that is now the hallmark of neoliberal capitalism.
      Citation: Sociological Theory
      PubDate: 2023-05-10T01:07:37Z
      DOI: 10.1177/07352751231169012
       
  • The Soils of Black Folk: W.E.B. Du Bois’s Theories of Environmental
           Racialization

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      Authors: Ankit Bhardwaj
      Abstract: Sociological Theory, Ahead of Print.
      Sociologists have canonized W.E.B. Du Bois as a theorist of race but have neglected his engagement with environmental themes. Not only was he concerned with ecology, such as the health of soils and water, but environmental themes also figured in his explanations of racism. Du Bois prefigured contemporary scholarship on environmental racism, detailing colonial capitalism’s uneven distribution of environmental benefits—such as natural resources—and harms—such as flooding and pollution. Moreover, Du Bois had novel insights on the role of environmental entities in shaping the adoption of racism, a process I term environmental racialization. He demonstrates how struggles over land led workers to pursue racism rather than solidarity. He argues that capitalist planters adopted racism to blame laborers for degraded soils. Du Bois is one of sociology’s earliest environmental theorists, uniquely illuminating how environment-society relations shape racism.
      Citation: Sociological Theory
      PubDate: 2023-04-22T12:03:34Z
      DOI: 10.1177/07352751231164999
       
  • When Is Populism Good for Liberal Democracy'

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      Authors: Josh Pacewicz
      Abstract: Sociological Theory, Ahead of Print.
      Debates over populism pit those who see it as dangerous for liberal democracy against those who view it as necessary for mobilizing the marginalized. This article flips the question and asks whether and how populist rhetoric supports liberal democracy. I synthesize accounts of voting behavior, poststructural Marxism, and pragmatism to develop a cognitive theory of populist resonance focused on how people use rhetoric to solve conceptual problems and illustrate it with interviews from the American Rust Belt during the Obama elections. In the main, voters use populist rhetoric to simplify political decisions when cross-pressured. Therefore, many traditional partisans, who saw party politics as rooted in blue- and white-collar identities, routinely made populist claims to sideline anti-pluralist appeals, whereas those alienated from politics were given to illiberalism. The analysis provides micro-sociological foundations for the intuition that populism is democratically functional in a stable party system, whereas illiberal populism is a symptom of enfeebled political parties.
      Citation: Sociological Theory
      PubDate: 2023-04-20T12:34:41Z
      DOI: 10.1177/07352751231167389
       
 
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