Not exact matches
A recent
study published in the American
Sociological Review clearly showed that, in a white collar environment, allowing workers some control over their own schedules, including being able to work from home, had a positive effect on employees» work - family balance without sacrificing productivity.
What's more, those 9 - to - 5 schedules aren't a smart strategy: Employees with flexibility in their workday report higher levels of job satisfaction and reduced levels of burnout and psychological stress, according to a
study conducted over 12 months at a Fortune 500 company with 700 employees and published in the February issue of American
Sociological Review.
As a 2006
study in the American
Sociological Review found, the number of close confidantes a typical individual has shrank by a third between 1985 and 2006, to about two from three.
Research from several sources, including a
study by the American
Sociological Review, has found that people with flexible schedules report that their overall sense of well - being increases with flexible work options.
Co., 1978); Thomas C. Campbell and Yoshio Fukuyama, The Fragmented Layman: An Empirical
Study of Lay Attitudes (Philadelphia: Pilgrim Press, 1970); James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as an Independent Variable,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,» Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,» Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Lay Attitudes (Philadelphia: Pilgrim Press, 1970); James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as an Independent Variable,» Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,» Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,» Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 11 (1972): 65 - 75; James D. Davidson, «Religious Belief as a Dependent Variable,»
Sociological Analysis 33 (1972): 81 - 94; James D. Davidson, «Patterns of Belief at the Denominational and Congregational Levels,»
Review of Religious Research 13 (1972): 197 - 205; David R. Gibbs, Samuel A. Miller, and James R. Wood, «Doctrinal Orthodoxy, Salience and the Consequential Dimension,» Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 12 (1973): 33 - 52; William McKinney, and others, Census Data for Community Mission (New York: Board for Homeland Ministries, United Church of Christ, 1983), part of a denomination - wide
study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
study of census data relevant to each congregation in the United Church of Christ; David O. Moberg, `' Theological Position and Institutional Characteristics of Protestant Congregations: An Explanatory
Study,» Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study,» Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion 9 (1970): 53 - 58; Wade Clark Roof, Community and Commitment; Thomas Sweetser, The Catholic Parish: Shifting Membership in a Changing Church (Chicago: Center for the Scientific
Study of Religion, 1
Study of Religion, 1974).
An assessment of Douglass's contribution both to
sociological method and to the
study of the local church is contained in Jeffrey K. Hadden, «H. Paul Douglass: His Perspective and His Work,»
Review of Religious Research 22 (1980): 66 - 88.
See especially Christopher Chase - Dunn, «The Effects of International Economic Dependence on Development and Inequality: A Cross-National
Study,» American
Sociological Review 40 (1975): 720 - 38.
A 2001
study published in the American
Sociological Review found that moms pay a «penalty» of 7 percent of their wages for every child they have.
Her
study will appear in the April edition of the journal American
Sociological Review.
The
study, published in the Chinese
Sociological Review, found that women with less marital power — shaped by their relative income, resources and education — had lower «fertility autonomy» and were likelier to succumb to pressure to have a second child even if they did not want to.
In a companion
study published online on 1 September in the American
Sociological Review, Evans, Rzhetsky, and Jacob Foster — an assistant professor of sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles, who is also a co-author of the PNAS paper — found that this possibility of prize - winning is «the most plausible explanation» for why researchers take the risks they do.
«Income inequality has an effect only half as large among childless folks,» said Owens, whose
study will be published online on April 27 and in the June print edition of the American
Sociological Review.
I've done some research and found several
sociological, peer -
reviewed studies that describe this process.
Titled «The Reversal of the Gender Gap in Education and Trends in Martial Dissolution,» the
study, which appears in the August issue of the American
Sociological Review, considers heterosexual U.S. marriages formed from 1950 - 2009.
Also, a 2006
study in American
Sociological Review found that the average person now has a smaller number of people in whom they could confide than folks typically did 20 years ago.
In the
study, which appears in the American
Sociological Review, Williams and her colleagues analyzed data from more than 3,000 single and married mothers who are participating in an ongoing, nationally representative government survey.
In December of last year, an issue of the American
Sociological Review reported on a
study of the recruiting practices of over a hundred professional service firms that found that applicants and employers with similarities in experiences, hobbies, and personal appearance made the best matches.
One in five couples now meet online, reports a 2012
study in the American
Sociological Review.
A
study which is scheduled to be published in the American
Sociological Review in December 2014 analyzes the factors that impact how students self - sort within schools and within individual classrooms.
Authors of a 2014 American
Sociological Review study concluded that job tenure (which was an average 6.9 years for women in 2012 and 7.4 for men that year) for mothers in particular can be connected to their employment situation when they give birth and the state of the job market.
A new
study published in the American
Sociological Review reports that when married couples divide household chores along gendered lines (i.e., with women doing more work inside the home, such as cleaning and ironing, and men doing more work outside of the home, such as mowing the lawn and fixing the car), they tend to have more sex [1].
SCOPUS, PsycINFO, Google Scholar, Academic OneFile, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA), CNKI, Current Abstracts, Dietrich's Index Philosophicus, EBSCO Academic Search, EBSCO Advanced Placement Source, EBSCO CINAHL, EBSCO Family & Society
Studies Worldwide, EBSCO Family
Studies Abstracts, EBSCO Military Transition Support Center, EBSCO Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection, EBSCO SocINDEX, EBSCO
Sociological Collection, EBSCO Sociology Source Ultimate, EBSCO TOC Premier, Educational Research Abstracts Online (ERA), EMCare, Emerging Sources Citation Index, FRANCIS, Gale, International Bibliography of Book
Reviews (IBR), International Bibliography of Periodical Literature (IBZ), OCLC, ProQuest Social Science Collection, ProQuest
Sociological Abstracts, PSYCLINE, SCImago, Sociology of Education Abstracts, Special Education Needs Abstracts,
Studies on Women & Gender Abstracts, Summon by ProQuest, Vocational Education and Training Abstracts
Wilcox has published articles on marriage, cohabitation, parenting, and fatherhood in The American
Sociological Review, Social Forces, The Journal of Marriage and Family and The Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion.
A 2016 Harvard
study, published in the American
Sociological Review, suggests that it's not a couple's finances that affect their chances of divorce, but rather the division of labor.
He has published articles on marriage, cohabitation, parenting, and fatherhood in The American
Sociological Review, Social Forces, The Journal of Marriage and Family and The Journal for the Scientific
Study of Religion.
Ottawa: Ministry of Supply and Services, 1988, pp. 36, 38 - 39; C. James Richardson, Divorce and Family Mediation Research
Study in Three Canadian Cities, Ministry of Supply and Services, 1988, pp. 287 - 288; Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr., Christine Winquist Nord, James L. Peterson, and Nicholas Zill, «The Life Course of Children of Divorce: Marital Disruption and Parental Contact,» American
Sociological Review, 48 (1983): 656 - 668, Table 6, p. 663; Federal / Provincial / Territorial Family Law Committee, Department of Justice, Canada, Custody and Access: Public Discussion Paper, Ottawa: Ministry of Supply and Services, 1993, p. 17.
Miriam Evensen, Torkild Hovde Lyngstad, Ole Melkevik, Arnstein Mykletun; The Role of Internalizing and Externalizing Problems in Adolescence for Adult Educational Attainment: Evidence from Sibling Comparisons using Data from the Young HUNT
Study, European
Sociological Review, Volume 32, Issue 5, 1 October 2016, Pages 552 — 566, https://doi.org/10.1093/esr/jcw001