ILR Review
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Berlin Summer School in Social Sciences
Berlin Summer School in Social Sciences
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Linking Theory and Empirical Research
Berlin, July 17 – 28, 2016
We are delighted to announce the 6th Berlin Summer School in Social Sciences. The summer school aims at promoting young researchers by strengthening their methodological understanding in linking theory and empirical research. The two weeks’ program creates an excellent basis for the advancement of their current research designs.
Member Request: Unpublished/In-press Studies of Social Class
Dear colleagues,
As part of an ongoing meta-analysis, I am writing to request any unpublished and in-press studies of social class. Because there are competing operationalizatons of this construct, this request may be a bit cumbersome. However, I am most interested in work that has used multiple measures from the following list:
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Student Gift Memberships
If you are a student member of ASA or know of a student member who is interested in organizations, occupations, and work, please consider joining or encouraging him/her to join at no cost ASA’s Organization, Occupations, and Work (OOW) section.
Thanks to the generous support of its members, OOW is covering the section membership fees ($5) for the first 50 students whose full names are emailed to Michel Anteby at manteby@bu.edu Please note that students MUST already be ASA members to be eligible for this offer.
Job Announcement:Research Associate at The Clayman Institute for Gender Research (Stanford)
The Clayman Institute for Gender Research at Stanford University seeks to hire a research associate with expertise in race/ethnicity and organizational behavior to contribute to the Institute’s research agenda on advancing women’s leadership and creating inclusive organizations. This is a two year fixed term position after which time there may be an opportunity to extend the position.
A Tribute to Randy Hodson: New Volume Of Research in the Sociology of Work
We are excited to share news of a new volume of Research in the Sociology of Work, which gives tribute to Randy Hodson.
A Gedenkschrift to Randy Hodson: Working with Dignity, Volume 28
Edited by Lisa Keister (Duke University) and Vincent Roscigno (The Ohio State University)ISBN: 9781785607271
Randy Hodson was one of contemporary sociology’s central figures in the study of work, occupations, and inequality. This volume pays tribute to his important scholarly contributions. Chapters by other important scholars in these fields reflect and build on his research in work conditions, worker resistance, and social stratification.
“This important volume extends a research tradition that finds its source in Randy Hodson’s remarkable scholarship, and particularly in his ability to put the lifeworld of workers back at the center of the sociology of work. Neophytes and social scientists already familiar with Hodson’s research program have much to learn from this first-class collection of essays. Through the various chapters, sociologists will rediscover a first rate mind — and human being — at work. Kudos to the editor for making this uniquely creative Gedenkschrift!”
Michele Lamont, author of The Dignity of Working Men, Professor of Sociology and African and American Studies, Harvard University
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Job Announcement: Visiting Assistant Professor Position at University of Illinois at Chicago
The Department of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago is seeking candidates for a one-year Visiting Assistant Professor beginning August 2016. We seek candidates who use statistical methods in their research and are able to contribute to the teaching of statistical methods at the graduate and undergraduate levels. The teaching load will be four courses; two graduate statistics courses (the second semester of a two-semester graduate statistics sequence; and an advanced statistical seminar for graduate students) and two sections of undergraduate statistics. The successful candidate will also have the opportunity to engage with a vibrant and supportive environment for pursuing their research and publications, including assignment to a senior faculty mentor in the department.
COSSA/AERA/ICPSR Statement on Common Rule
COSSA, AERA and ICPSR have drafted a statement on Common Rule protections for Human Subjects. The letter can be found online here.
OOW Sponsorship of RSW and RSO
The OOW Section is pleased to officially announce its sponsorship of two related publications: Research in the Sociology of Organizations and Research in the Sociology of Work, both published by Emerald Group Publishing.
In addition to announcing the sponsorship to our members, a statement that the volumes are “Sponsored by the ASA Section on Organizations, Occupations and Work” will appear, during the sponsorship term, on the front covers of volumes published, on the homepage of the related publications, and on leaflets and other advertising materials which promote the publications and volumes.
Importantly for our members, Emerald has agreed to provide free electronic access to papers published in the publications, for agreed limited periods, and has agreed to contribute $1,500 USD annually towards the section. Emerald has also agreed to provide a 30% discount for OOW members of the print copies of the volumes.
The parties agreed on a period of one year (January 1— December 31, 2016) for this sponsorship, after which it will be reviewed by all parties for continuation.
New Publication of Interest: ILR Review Winter 2016
ILR Review
January 2016; Vol. 69, No. 1
Table of Contents
Articles
Harmonious Unions and Rebellious Workers: A Study of Wildcat Strikes in Vietnam
Mark Anner and Xiangmin Liu
The authors examine enterprise-level antecedents of wildcat strikes in Vietnam using a national representative sample of foreign-invested enterprises over the period 2010 to 2012, coding of factory audits, and field research. They predict that these unauthorized, semi-spontaneous work stoppages are more common among unionized workplaces, because the presence of a union in the workplace signals to workers that by engaging in a wildcat strike, they may be able to activate the representation and protection role of official trade unions. That is, workers can in some cases push unions from below to act on their behalf. In addition, wholly foreign-owned enterprises, investments by Asian-owned firms, and manufacturing operations in industrial zones are associated with more strikes than are joint ventures with state-owned and private enterprises, firms owned by Western investors, and firms in higher-value-added activities. Statistical results and field research provide strong support for these predictions. These findings suggest that the role of trade unions in socialist states may be more nuanced than previously assumed. At the same time, they reinforce the observation in the literature that Vietnamese employment relations institutions are unable, in and of themselves, to address worker grievances.
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