【国家と文化を比較する】
Comparing Nations and Cultures: Readings in a cross-disciplinary perspective. paper 648 p.
内容
目次
I. THE CASE FOR A COMPARATIVE APPROACH. 1. Karl W. Deutsch, Prologue:Achievements and Challenges in 2000 Years of Comparative Research. 2. ArianeBerthoin Antal, Meinolf Dierkes and Hans N. Weiler, Cross-National PolicyResearch: Traditions, Achievements and Challenges. 3. Stein Rokkan,Cross-Cultural, Cross-Societal and Cross- National Research. 4. Melvin L.Kohn, Cross-National Research as an Analytic Strategy: American SociologicalAssociation, 1987 Presidential Address. II. METHODS. 5. Erwin K. Scheuch,Theoretical Implications of Comparative Survey Research: Why the Wheel ofCross-Cultural Methodology Keeps on Being Reinvented. 6. Charles C. Ragin,The Distinctiveness of Comparative Social Structure. 7. Neil J. Smelser, TheMethodology of Comparative Analysis of Economic Activity. III. SOCIALSTRATIFICATION. 8. Alex Inkeles and Peter H. Rossi, National Comparisons ofOccupational Prestige. 9. Donald J. Treiman and Kermit Terrell, The Processof Status Attainment in the United States and Great Britain. 10. Erik OlinWright, The Comparative Project on Class Structure and Class Consciousness:An Overview. IV. FAMILY. 11. Franz Hollinger and Max Haller, Kinship andSocial Networks in Modern Societies: A Cross-Cultural Comparison among SevenNations. 12. Godfrey J. Ellis, Gary R. Lee, and Larry R. Petersen,Supervision and Conformity: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of ParentalSocialization Values. 13. William M. Bridgeland, Philip R. Smith, and EdwardA. Duane, Child-Care Policy Arenas: A Comparison between Sweden and theUnited States. V. WOMEN, GENDER, AND FEMINISM. 14. Alice Schlegel, Gender,Issues, and Cross-Cultural Research. 15. Nancy J. Davis and Robert V.Robinson, Men's and Women's Consciousness of Gender Inequality: Austria, WestGermany, Great Britain, and the United States. 16. Patricia A. Roos,Marriage and Women's Occupational Attainment in Cross-Cultural Perspective.VI. DEVIANCE AND CONTROL. 17. Norman L. Farberow, Cultural History ofSuicide. 18. Paul C. Friday, International Review of Youth Crime andDelinquency. 19. Rosemary Gartner, The Victims of Homicide: A Temporal andCross-National Comparison. VII. EDUCATION. 20. Gail P. Kelly and Philip G.Altbach, Comparative Education: Challenges and Response. 21. Aaron Benavot,Yung-Kyung Cha, David Kamens, John W. Meyer, and Suk-Ying Wong, Knowledge forthe Masses: World Models and National Curricula, 1920-1986. 22. Harry G.Judge, Cross-National Perceptions of Teachers. VIII. WELFARE AND SOCIALSERVICES. 23. Jens Alber, Gosta Esping-Andersen, and Lee Rainwater, Studyingthe Welfare State: Issues and Queries. 24. John B. Williamson and Jeanne J.Fleming, Convergence Theory and the Social Welfare Sector: A Cross-NationalAnalysis. 25. Vincent A. Mahler and Claudio J. Katz, Social Benefits inAdvanced Capitalist Countries: A Cross-National Assessment. IX.ORGANIZATIONS. 26. Karlene H. Roberts and Nakiye A. Boyacigiller,Cross-National Organizational Research: The Grasp of the Blind Men. 27.Geert Hofstede, The Cultural Relativity of Organizational Practices andTheories. 28. Erhard Blankenburg, Comparing the Incomparable--Study ofEmployment Agencies in Five Countries. X. POLITICS. 29. Gabriel A. Almondand Sidney Verba, Five Political Cultures. 30. Seymour Martin Lipset, TheSocial Requisites of Democracy Revisited. 31. S.N. Eisenstadt, Frameworks ofthe Great Revolutions: Culture, Social Structure, History, and Human Agency.XI. THE STUDY OF NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT. 32. Samuel P. Huntington, The Goalsof Development. 33. Immanuel Wallerstein, National Development and the WorldSystem at the End of the Cold War. 34. Theotonio Dos Santos, The Structureof Dependence. XII. POPULATION: ANALYSIS AND ADVOCACY. 35. Samuel Keyfitz,Population Theory and Doctrine: A Historical Survey. 36. Kingsley Davis,Population and Resources: Fact and Interpretation. 37. James P. Grant, TheState of the World's Children 1993: The Age of Neglect and the Age ofConcern. XIII. ATTITUDES AND VALUES. 38. Alex Inkeles, Making Men Modern:On the Causes and Consequences of Individual Change in Six DevelopingCountries. 39. Masamichi Sasaki and Tatsuzo Suzuki, Changes in ReligiousCommitment in the United States, Holland, and Japan. 40. Ronald Inglehart,Postmaterialism in an Environment of Insecurity.