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020 _a803927894
040 _cNULRC
050 _aHM 13 .S63 1986
245 4 _aThe Social fabric :
_bdimensions and issues /
_cedited by James F. Short, Jr.
260 _aBeverly Hills, California :
_bSage Publications, Incorporation,
_cc1986
300 _a366 pages ;
_c23 cm.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _aThe social fabric as metaphor and reality -- From structure to order -- Individual choice and the social order -- Institutionalized public memory -- A conceptual framework for measuring norms -- The problem of order -- Orwell as macrosociologist -- War and peace in Oceania -- The iron fist and the velvet glove : totalitarian potentials within democratic structures -- To what degree is a social system dependent on its resource base? -- The limits and possibilities of government : a perspective from sociology of law -- Government and the making of social structure -- Wheeling and annealing : federal and multidivisional control -- Citizen soldier versus economic man -- Social history and the life-course perspective on the family : a view from the bridge -- Religion and the social fabric -- Media linkages of the social fabric -- Sociology and the nuclear debate -- Uses and control of knowledge : implications for the social fabric.
520 _aThis volume is based on papers prepared for plenary and thematic sessions at the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association, held in San Antonio, Texas, August 27-31, 1984. This book's title was the theme of that meeting. The announcement of this theme, published in the Association's newsletter, Footnotes, challenged ASA members and others to address such questions as the following: What have we to say about the nature of the social fabric, its strengths, and its weaknesses? What is it that holds societies together despite conflicts of interest? How do we account for the seeming paradox of the persistence of institutional forms in modern societies in the face of extreme vulnerability (to terrorism, for example) and rapid change? How, and with what consequences, is the balance struck between coercion and cooperation, between centralized control and local autonomy, between leaders (and would-be leaders) and constituencies, between experts (and would-be experts) and those whose lives depend on specialized knowledge?
650 _aSOCIOLOGY
700 _aShort, James F.
_eeditor
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c6737
_d6737