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The financial dimension of organizational stratification in European higher education International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Krzysztof Czarnecki, Petra Sauer
This article contributes to the knowledge on organizational stratification in higher education by exploring its financial dimension in 21 European countries over the period 2013–2017. Cross-country differences in the inequality of revenues among higher education institutions are considerable. Decomposing inequality indices shows that they are related to the various degrees of institutional diversity
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The wealth of nations matters: A cross-national analysis of how political orientation and household income affect attitudes toward environmental protection International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Piotr Cichocki, Piotr Jabkowski, Mariusz Baranowski
The article investigates normative preferences for environmental protection over economic growth registered in 74 countries—based on the European Values Study and the World Value Survey (2017–2022). We employ multi-level logistic regression to demonstrate that Gross Domestic Product per capita moderates the effects of political orientation and household income, both of which tend to be stronger in
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Institutional characteristics of education systems and inequalities: Introduction III International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-02-23 Christiane Gross, Andreas Hadjar
This is the third and final of multiple themed issues of International Journal of Comparative Sociology ( IJCS) dedicated to the question of how education systems shape educational inequalities in terms of systematic variations access to and uptake of education along certain axes of inequality such as social origin, gender, and immigrant background. While the previous introductions dealt with the research
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Introduction to the special issue of the International Journal of Comparative Sociology on “National identity, nationalism, patriotism, and globalization” International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-02-20 Markus Quandt, Peter Schmidt
This editors’ introduction into the themed issue of IJCS dedicated to the analysis of comparative survey work on national identity and globalization presents a very brief overview of core hypotheses from the five articles collected in the issue. The articles offer a variety of new, rather differentiated insights into how individual-level national identity attitudes and sibling concepts like national
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Patterns of overeducation among highly educated mobile intra-EU workers, 2005–2016: Enlargement, financial crisis, and mobility International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-02-14 Alberto del Rey Poveda, Mikolaj Stanek, Jesús García-Gómez, Guillermo Orfao
This study analyses the working conditions of highly educated mobile workers in five major European Union (EU) markets. The study uses the overeducation indicator, analyzing its transformation over the period 2005–2016. Using annual data from the European Union Labour Force Survey, the results reveal very different conditions between home country nationals and mobile workers from newer (enlargement)—EU-13—and
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Do secondary education systems influence the overeducation risk of university graduates? A cross-national analysis by field of study and social background International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-02-05 Queralt Capsada-Munsech
To what extent do features of education systems in the secondary school influence university graduates being overeducated? Previous research shows that the social origin and the field of study of university graduates are relevant predictors of overeducation. However, the strength of the influence of their social origin varies across fields of study. Having a privileged social origin prevents university
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(In)sufficient institutionalization? Norm articulation in the World Health Organization and infectious disease prevalence across the global South International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-02-03 Kristen Shorette, Nolan Edward Phillips
Recent work in the neoinstitutional tradition has sought to clarify the mechanisms by which global norms diffuse across the world system. Prior work highlights the role of organizational linkages between world society and the nation-state—especially international nongovernmental organizations (INGOs)—in the process of spreading policies, practices, and ideas cross-nationally. Although prior empirical
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The impact of marketization on school segregation and educational equity and effectiveness: Evidence from Australia and Canada International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-01-31 Laura B Perry, Ee-Seul Yoon, Michael Sciffer, Christopher Lubienski
While marketization has been promoted as a mechanism for improving educational equity and effectiveness, substantial evidence suggests that it may have the opposite effect. We contribute to this debate by examining educational equity and effectiveness in two similar countries that have embraced educational marketization to different degrees. Drawing on data from the Program for International Student
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Visualized values on Instagram: A comparison of visual practices among German and Ukrainian Instagram users International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-01-29 Ekaterina Bataeva
This article focuses on the similarities and differences between visual value content on German and Ukrainian Instagram, employing the methodology of traditional, modernist, and postmodernist values. In particular, we investigate the gender aspect of visualized values on Instagram in a cross-cultural comparative perspective. The results of content analysis of 2095 photos on German Instagram and 2657
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Multidimensional domestic gender inequality and the global diffusion of women’s ministries, 1975–2015 International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Juan J Fernández, Silvia Clavería, Margarita Torre
Since the 1970s, many countries have passed policy and institutional reforms to promote gender equality and the wellbeing of women. The global diffusion of gender and women’s ministries constitutes a manifestation of this process. However, our understanding of the diffusion of this organizational form is very limited. To fill this gap, we examine the adoption of cabinet-level, women’s ministries worldwide
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Trust repertoires and the reception of institutional responses to the COVID-19 crisis in Europe: A latent class analysis International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-01-17 Marc Verboord
This article examines the role of institutional trust in current European societies. Based on a secondary data analysis of Eurobarometer data (response rate 39.6%), it maps institutional trust repertoires and analyzes their consequences for a crisis that disturbed public life immensely in 2020 and 2021—the COVID-19 pandemic and the measures to fight this. Methodologically, it applies a multilevel latent
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“Climate translators” building trust and local democratic cooperation on green transition: Denmark and Germany International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2024-01-08 Nicole Doerr, Janus Porsild Hansen
This article investigates how climate activists engage in building trust in public debates and local political conflicts over green transition. The article applies the empirically grounded concept of “climate translators” to study the challenges of intermediary trust-building by both independent climate activists and institutionally embedded activists who aim to stimulate climate policy change at the
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“It gave us a thrill”: Emotions, exile, and narratives of (dis)engagement among activists from Syria International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-04-22 Amany Selim
Building on qualitative interviews with Syrians who participated in the anti-regime movement of 2011 and now live in Berlin and Oslo, the article unpacks the ways that these contexts affected parti...
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Trade union strength, business power, and labor policy reform: The cases of Argentina and Chile in comparative perspective International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-03-26 Pablo Pérez Ahumada
In this article, I explain why pro-labor reforms succeed or fail. Focusing on the cases of Argentina and Chile, I show that labor reforms are more successful in extending trade union rights when un...
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Cross-national differences in the association between intergenerational support and fertility in East Asia International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-03-26 Jolene Tan
In past and contemporary societies, kin presence and support are widely cherished for helping couples contend with parenthood. Thus, it is hypothesized that intergenerational cooperation in raising...
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Low-wage mobility in Central Europe International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-03-07 Daniel Gerbery, Tomáš Miklošovič
The article provides analyses of the mobility and resilience to mobility among low-wage earners in four Central European (CE) countries. It examines transitions into higher-paid jobs, unemployment/...
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Educational tracking and social inequalities in long-term labor market outcomes: Six countries in comparison International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-02-10 Steffen Schindler, Eyal Bar-Haim, Carlo Barone, Jesper Fels Birkelund, Vikki Boliver, Queralt Capsada-Munsech, Jani Erola, Marta Facchini, Yariv Feniger, Laura Heiskala, Estelle Herbaut, Mathieu Ichou, Kristian Bernt Karlson, Corinna Kleinert, David Reimer, Claudia Traini, Moris Triventi, Louis-André Vallet
In this country-comparative study, we ask to what extent differentiation in secondary education accounts for the association between social origins and social destinations in adult age. We go beyon...
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From mass mobilization to neoliberal war-making: Labor strikes and military-industrial transformation in the United States International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2023-02-03 Corey R Payne
How did workers affect—and how were they affected by—the dramatic transformations of U.S. war-making that have occurred since the mid-twentieth century? Where do such transformations leave workers ...
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Emotional reason: The Israeli scientific mind facing a German cultural mirror International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-12-17 Gad Yair
Scientists often surmise that scientific thought is a universal faculty akin to Kant’s description of “pure reason.” The conventional view insists that science should censor the passions and bar th...
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Army embeddedness, political opportunities and threats, and the dynamics of contention: Understanding the varying role of the armed forces in the Egyptian, Syrian, and Libyan 2011 revolts International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-12-07 Eitan Alimi
In many Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries, the army has traditionally been a central pillar of the authoritarian regimes, responsible for the security and integrity of the state and a s...
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Students and protests: A quantitative cross-national analysis International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-11-19 Vadim V Ustyuzhanin, Patrick S Sawyer, Andrey V Korotayev
Previous studies have found a positive relationship between the youth and the educated with protest number, but the form that these protests take needs further research. We argue that students are ...
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How do political opportunities impact protest potential? A multilevel cross-national assessment International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-11-03 Dana M Williams
This article tests the general explanatory power of political opportunity theory for cross-national variations in protest throughout the world, and considers how opportunities influence individual-...
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Financialization goes South: Foreign capital flows and financial accumulation in emerging markets International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-10-25 Matthew Soener
Has global financial integration allowed firms in the so-called “Global South” to profit from financial activity? Financialization researchers have either neglected these countries and the internat...
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Leaving out of necessity or out of ambition? The impact of socio-economic development on factors of youth emigration from countries of South Eastern Europe International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-10-12 Andrej Naterer, Miran Lavrič
Based on survey data from representative national samples of young people, we compared the impact of nine different factors of emigration desire among young people from 10 countries of Southeast Eu...
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Life satisfaction, skills diffusion, and the Japan Paradox: Toward multidisciplinary research on the skills trap International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-09-23 Satoshi Araki
Recent research argues skills are the key to socio-economic success for individuals and societies, ranging from labor market outcomes to non-economic well-being. Drawing on these arguments, this st...
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Genetic identity as a regime of truth: Same sex and transnational surrogacy parenthood in the United States and Israel International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-09-02 Daphna Birenbaum-Carmeli, Sharmila Rudrappa
Through examining cases of cross-border surrogacy in Israel and the United States, we offer the concept of genetic kinning defined as the narratives deployed by individuals that give prominence to ...
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Religion as a factor in cultural consumption: Religious denomination and its impact on reading practices and ballet-opera attendance in Europe International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Joaquim Rius-Ulldemolins, Alejandro Pizzi, Raul Paya
The influence of social and educational factors has often been used to explain social differences in consumption and cultural practices. Without denying the value of such an approach, this article ...
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Pro-integration policies and the occupational expectations of immigrant youth International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-08-08 Volha Chykina
Europe is experiencing heightened public attention toward anti-immigration policy reforms and restrictions. Despite the potential importance of these policy changes, we do not know whether these po...
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Contrasting perspectives: Belief in national superiority in relation to countries’ performance International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-08-08 Marharyta Fabrykant, Vladimir Magun
This article examines cross-country differences in the strength of individuals’ belief that their country is better than most others and the dependence of this belief on their country’s performance...
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Couple disagreements and partnership stability in 10 European countries: Could differences in gender equality explain cross-national variations? International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-08-02 Petr Fučík
This article focuses on the association between couple disagreement and partnership stability. In particular, we explore the mediating role of macrostructural gender inequality on the effect of couple disagreements on partnership stability in a cross-national comparative perspective. We analyzed data from two waves of the Gender and Generations Survey (fielded between 2004 and 2011) to explore the
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Animals in world society: Constitutional and legislative incorporation, 1972–2020 International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-26 Mike Zapp, David John Frank, Marcelo Marques
This article analyzes cross-national and longitudinal variations in the incorporation of nonhuman animals into country constitutions and legislation. We argue that incorporation follows from the scientific rationalization and human rights-based ontological elaboration of nonhuman animals in world society, carried by a growing number of intergovernmental agreements and international nongovernmental
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Union brokerage and the gender gap in the labor market: A cross-national comparative study of associational networks and gendered labor force participation in OECD countries International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-24 Cheol-Sung Lee, Taekyeong Goh
This article explores the role of union-centered brokerage in promoting women’s labor force participation in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries for the last three decades. Using two measures of brokerage, a union’s core brokerage role, and its general brokerage role, we attempted to capture the processes by which union activists mobilize and extend women’s rights in associational
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Shifting surrogacies: Comparative ethnographies International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Anika König, Andrea Whittaker, Trudie Gerrits, Virginie Rozée
Gestational surrogacy is a reproductive arrangement where a woman gestates a child for others—the “intended parents”—in order to be handed over to them after birth. Since the turn of the millennium, demands for surrogacy have continuously increased due to social and demographic changes, rising rates of infertility, and the normalization of new, non-heteronormative, family forms. Many countries prohibit
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Global out-of-home childcare and world culture International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Olga Ulybina
The focus of this article is the link between the modern world culture and national public policy commitments. Drawing on world society theory and using data for 193 countries between 1990 and 2020—1411 documents in total—we analyze the global pattern of policy commitments to out-of-home childcare deinstitutionalization. Deinstitutionalization refers to the policy of moving children from institutional
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Explaining when older persons are perceived as a burden: A cross-national analysis of ageism International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-06 Andreas Hövermann, Steven F Messner
This study aims to shed further light on the emergence of ageist attitudes by introducing a theoretically grounded mechanism that helps explain why older persons appear as burdensome by segments of society. We introduce the concept of “marketized mentality” (MM), which depicts a strong personal commitment to the principal values associated with the market economy, to the research on ageism. The results
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Can the social dimension of time contribute to explain the public evaluation of political change? The case of European integration International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-07-06 Thomas Malang
According to social theorists of time, the way societies structure and value different aspects of time plays an important role in people’s perception and evaluation of economic, political, and cultural change. I explore if two dimensions of social time—social acceleration and long-term orientation—have an effect on the public evaluation of the speed of European integration. Combining Eurobarometer
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Paperwork: Following the trail of (identity) papers in transnational commercial surrogacy International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-14 Anika König, Anindita Majumdar
Transnational surrogacy—the carrying of a child by a woman in one country on behalf of persons in another—is strongly shaped by documents. Of these, identity documents are particularly crucial as they establish the belonging of a child born through such an arrangement both to its parents (birth certificate) and to a country (passport). However, the acquisition of these documents is subject to national
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Queer decisions: Racial matching among gay male intended parents International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-18 Marcin Smietana, France Winddance Twine
How does race and location shape the reproductive decisions of gay men who are intended parents? In this article, we propose the concept of strategic racialization to characterize the ways in which gay male parents employ racial matching in their selection of egg donors and surrogates in the United States and United Kingdom. We argue that racial matching is a strategy of stigma management. This study
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Violated entitlement and the nation: How feelings of relative deprivation shape nationalism and constructive patriotism International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-07 Steffen Wamsler
Perceptions of violated entitlement resulting from group-based relative deprivation shape attitudes and behaviors decisively. Drawing on social identity theory, I hypothesize that nationalism and constructive patriotism portray divergent relationships with subjective feelings of being disadvantaged due to different coping strategies to overcome status inferiority. Employing an original, large-scale
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Inequalities in (trans)national surrogacy: A call for examining complex lived realities with an empirical lens International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-04 Heather Jacobson, Virginie Rozée
Income disparity has become a mainstay of the international critique and public discourse on commercial surrogacy. Using existing empirical data, including our two respective field studies in India and the United States, we analyze surrogacy from a gender perspective and show how the visibility of gender disparities in a transnational context encourages assumptions at the local and national context
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Social selectivity and gender-segregation across fields of study: Comparative evidence from Austria International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-03 Franziska Lessky, Erna Nairz, Marcus Wurzer
This study explores stratification within the Austrian university system by focusing on social selectivity and gender-segregation across fields of study. We investigate how much the choice of field of study is associated with parental educational background and the gender of the students—especially, how these characteristics vary across individual (teaching) subjects. Teacher training is often regarded
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Corruption in the public schools of Europe: A cross-national multilevel analysis of education system characteristics International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-06-02 Ilona Wysmułek
Researchers have long theorized that characteristics of education systems impact both perceived and experienced corruption in public schools. However, due to insufficient cross-national survey data with measures on corruption in education and unassembled yet publicly available institutional data, there are few empirical tests of this theory. This article provides the rare direct test of the relationship
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Exclusionary attitudes toward immigrants: Globalization and configurations of ascribed and achieved status across 14 European countries International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Ronald Kwon, William J. Scarborough, Tanya Faglie
Research on immigration attitudes focuses on two dimensions of exclusionary preferences: those related to achieved characteristics and those related to ascribed characteristics. First, we expand this work by unpacking how individuals blend attitudes across these two dimensions. Applying latent profile analysis to a comprehensive set of exclusionary indicators from the European Social Survey in 2002
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Institutional characteristics of education systems and inequalities: Introduction II International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-15 Christiane Gross, Andreas Hadjar, Laura Zapfe
This is the second special issue of the International Journal of Comparative Sociology on the role of education systems as institutional settings on the reproduction of inequalities. The first was published in January 2021 and included papers that explored the role of shadow education and country characteristics during early childhood on educational inequalities. This special issue includes three papers
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Cumulative advantages and disadvantages in attainment of higher education: Set-analytic comparison of asymmetric inequalities in six European countries International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Triin Lauri, Ellu Saar
This article explores how parental resources work together to secure higher education for their offspring. It does so by, first, mapping the linkages between cumulative advantages and disadvantages of respondents’ parental resources and educational attainment across countries and cohorts. Second, investigating under which institutional setup of education systems these linkages between parental background
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Does inequality exacerbate status anxiety among higher earners? A longitudinal evaluation International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-10 David Bartram
According to The Spirit Level, inequality is bad for everyone—including people with higher incomes. That conclusion is evident also in research exploring the impact of inequality on status anxiety. But existing research on this topic is cross-sectional (and gives too much weight to statistical significance). I construct a longitudinal analysis to explore whether status anxiety increases with inequality
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Financialization, confidence, and sovereign debt markets: The role of Credit Default Swaps in the Southern European debt crisis International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-04 Matilde Massó, Rubén Fernández-Casal, Obdulia Taboadela
This article analyzes the state–market nexus by examining the role played by sovereign credit default swap (CDS) derivative markets in the southern European debt crisis of 2010–2014. This nexus is conceived of as being part of a larger process of state financialization and, more specifically, of sovereign debt management. This article shows that the southern European debt crisis was triggered by the
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Individual responsibility or trust in the state: A comparison of surrogates’ legal consciousness International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Elly Teman, Zsuzsa Berend
Drawing on ethnographic research in the United States and Israel, two countries that have long-term experience with surrogacy, we compare surrogates’ understanding of, approaches to, and expectations about regulation. Women who become surrogates in these two countries hold opposite views about regulation. US surrogates formulate their rejection of standardized regulation—including standardized screening
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Similar gaps, different paths? Comparing racial inequalities among BA holders in Brazil and the United States International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-14 Graziella Moraes Silva, Luciana de Souza Leão, Christina Ciocca Eller, Flavio Carvalhaes, Thomas A DiPrete
In this article, we compare how racial inequalities are shaped by school-to-work transitions among bachelor’s degree (BA) holders in Brazil and the United States. Our findings reveal how distinct paths linking higher education and the job market can drive similar patterns of Black–White earnings gaps. While the distribution across fields of study matters more for racial earnings inequality in Brazil
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General trust in the health care system and general trust in physicians: A multilevel analysis of 30 countries International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Yaqi Yuan, Kristen Schultz Lee
This article builds upon a multilevel theory of trust to explore the relationship between general trust in health care systems and general trust in physicians and the social-contextual factors that shape this relationship. We develop a model of trust in physicians emphasizing the embeddedness of individuals in broader social-institutional contexts. We analyze data from 30 countries in the 2011 International
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News coverage of social protests in global society International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Yongjun Zhang, Sienna Thorgusen, Xinguang Fan
This article links media and social movement studies with world society theory to explain cross-national variations in media attention to domestic social protests. We compile a novel large-scale dataset with over 1.2 million protest-related news articles from 12,644 web news sites across 140 countries/areas in 2015–2020. Our cross-national analysis shows that both media- and country-level characteristics
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Revolutionary struggle and its diffusion: A configurational analysis of the 2011 Arab Uprisings International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Tyson Patros
Researchers of revolutionary waves argue that early cases diffuse mobilization to later cases which are, compared with their forerunners, disadvantaged as they have fewer favorable antecedent conditions and less strategic protagonists. Using fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA) and comparative case studies, I examine the 2011 Arab Uprisings in order to ask: (1) Why does revolutionary
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Post-industrial capitalism and trade union decline in affluent democracies International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Christopher Kollmeyer
This study examines trade union decline in light of concurrent changes in the demographic and sectoral composition of labor markets. Drawing on classical sociology and contemporary scholarship on work and employment, the author theorizes that the emergence of post-industrial work settings coupled with more socially diverse workforces make labor organizing more difficult than prior research recognizes
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Individual value orientation, social norms, and volunteering outcomes in later life International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Martin Lakomý
A growing body of scholarship examines the social and personal benefits of volunteering across the life course. However, less is known about how this experience of volunteering varies across different national contexts and how the impact of volunteering is shaped by micro- and macro-conditions. This article utilizes a cross-national multilevel regression analysis of European Values Survey data to explore
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Homeownership regimes and class inequality among young adults International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-02-02 Or Cohen Raviv, Noah Lewin-Epstein
In this study, we merge the literature on homeownership regimes, which focuses to a lesser extent on the consequences of wealth and social inequality, with the literature on wealth and social stratification, which overlooks the importance of homeownership regimes in contributing to those inequalities. Within this framework, we examine to what extent homeownership regimes shape class inequality in homeownership
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Book review: Diplomatic Tenses: A Social Evolutionary Perspective on Diplomacy International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Samuel Clark
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Book review: The Legacies of Institutionalisation: Disability, Law and Policy in the “Deinstitutionalised” Community International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Peter Blanck
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Book review: A Global History of Runaways: Workers, Mobility, and Capitalism, 1600-1850 International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 David B. Feldman
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Book review: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Global Case Studies International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Eve Spangler
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Book review: Locally Led Peacebuilding: Global Case Studies International Journal of Comparative Sociology (IF 2.156) Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Eve Spangler