9780773512641-0773512640-Convergence or Divergence? Comparing Recent Social Trends in Industrial Societies (Comparative Charting of Social Change)

Convergence or Divergence? Comparing Recent Social Trends in Industrial Societies (Comparative Charting of Social Change)

ISBN-13: 9780773512641
ISBN-10: 0773512640
Edition: 1
Author: Theodore Caplow, Simon Langlois
Publication date: 1995
Publisher: McGill Queens Univ
Format: Hardcover 340 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780773512641
ISBN-10: 0773512640
Edition: 1
Author: Theodore Caplow, Simon Langlois
Publication date: 1995
Publisher: McGill Queens Univ
Format: Hardcover 340 pages

Summary

Convergence or Divergence? Comparing Recent Social Trends in Industrial Societies (Comparative Charting of Social Change) (ISBN-13: 9780773512641 and ISBN-10: 0773512640), written by authors Theodore Caplow, Simon Langlois, was published by McGill Queens Univ in 1995. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Convergence or Divergence? Comparing Recent Social Trends in Industrial Societies (Comparative Charting of Social Change) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.44.

Description

Trends in fertility decline, intergenerational relations, religion and secularization, ecological movements, employment and labour-market changes, personal authority, and social conflict are examined. This analysis shows an unmistakable convergence of social trends except in the domain of religion. But when the interconnection of these trends within each national society is examined, unexpected divergences are revealed. There are parallel trends in demography, organization of production, national institutions, social practices, and life style, and divergent trends in social inequality, social movements, and local institutions. Barriers between social classes have eroded and something that might be called multidimensional stratification has emerged, the diminution of violence in social conflicts implies an increasing volume of negotiation, and all forms of personal authority have been weakened. The transformation of the family structure is no doubt one of the most important changes in western civilization. The cross-national analyses of recent social trends help us to assess both convergence and divergence and to identify emergent singularities. Does convergence of trends mean these societies face a common destiny? With respect to trends so strong that they act as exogenous variables, the answer is yes. However, with respect to the responses those trends elicit in the context of a particular society, the answer is no. Massive convergence of trends does not mean that societies face a uniform future.
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