Test Bank for Sociology Compass for a New Social World 6th Canadian Edition by Brym

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  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0176849696
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0176849696
  • Author:   Robert Brym (Author), Lance Roberts (Author), Lisa Strohschein (Author)

A compelling design, research focus, and an engaging narrative defines Sociology: Compass for a New Social World. The renowned author team shows students how thinking sociologically can help them draw connections between themselves and the social world. Sociological concepts are clearly connected to students’ interests and experiences by taking universal and popular elements of contemporary culture and rendering them sociologically relevant. This text devotes more space than others do to drawing connections between objectivity and subjectivity in research, presenting a more realistic, and therefore more exciting, account of how sociologists practise their craft. Tables and graphs are not simply referred to, they are analyzed. Some theories are rejected, while others are endorsed. The author team brings depth to issues of diversity and globalization using personal and research experiences.

 

Table of Content:

  1. PART 1 Foundations
  2. CHAPTER 1 A Sociological Compass
  3. Introduction
  4. Why You Need a Compass for a New World
  5. The Goals of This Chapter
  6. The Sociological Perspective
  7. The Sociological Explanation of Suicide
  8. Suicide in Canada Today
  9. From Personal Troubles to Social Structures
  10. BOX 1.1 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: SUICIDE AND THE INNU OF LABRADOR
  11. The Sociological Imagination
  12. BOX 1.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: HIDDEN FIGURES
  13. BOX 1.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: SHOCK TV GETS POLITICAL
  14. Origins of the Sociological Imagination
  15. Theories, Research, and Values
  16. Theories
  17. Research
  18. Values
  19. Sociological Theory and Theorists
  20. Functionalism
  21. Conflict Theory
  22. Symbolic Interactionism
  23. Feminist Theory
  24. Fashion Cycles and the Four Theoretical Perspectives
  25. Functionalism
  26. Conflict Theory
  27. Symbolic Interactionism
  28. Feminism
  29. A Sociological Compass
  30. Equality vs. Inequality of Opportunity
  31. Freedom vs. Constraint
  32. Why Sociology?
  33. Careers in Sociology
  34. BOX 1.4 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: ARE CORPORATE SCANDALS A PROBLEM OF INDIVIDUAL ETHICS OR SOCIAL POLICY?
  35. Summary
  36. Note
  37. CHAPTER 2 How Sociologists Do Research
  38. Science and Experience
  39. OTTFFSSENT
  40. Levels of Experience
  41. Scientific vs. Unscientific Thinking
  42. Research Preliminaries
  43. Research Approaches
  44. The Research Act: Connecting Ideas to Evidence
  45. Ethical Considerations
  46. BOX 2.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: GOVERNMENT NUTRITIONAL EXPERIMENTS IN RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS
  47. BOX 2.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: ZERO DARK THIRTY
  48. Quantitative Approaches
  49. Measuring Variables
  50. Experiments
  51. Surveys
  52. BOX 2.3 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: PRIVACY, POLITICS, AND THE CANADIAN CENSUS
  53. Qualitative Approaches
  54. Participant Observation
  55. BOX 2.4 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: UNDERCOVER BOSS
  56. Qualitative Interviewing
  57. The Importance of Being Subjective
  58. Summary
  59. PART 2 Basic Social Processes
  60. CHAPTER 3 Culture
  61. Culture as Problem Solving
  62. Culture as Meaning Generator
  63. Culture Defined
  64. The Origins of Culture
  65. Four Types of Norms: Folkways, Mores, Taboos, and Laws
  66. BOX 3.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: SPOTLIGHT
  67. Culture and Biology
  68. The Evolution of Human Behaviour
  69. Language and the Sapir-Whorf Thesis
  70. A Functionalist Analysis of Culture: Culture and Ethnocentrism
  71. Culture as Freedom
  72. Symbolic Interactionism and Cultural Production
  73. Cultural Diversity
  74. Multiculturalism
  75. BOX 3.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: SHOULD RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS BE BANNED IN PUBLIC SPACES?
  76. A Conflict Analysis of Culture: The Rights Revolution
  77. BOX 3.3 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION: CULTURAL RELATIVISM OR ETHNOCENTRISM?
  78. From Diversity to Globalization
  79. Postmodernism
  80. Canada: The First Postmodern Culture?
  81. Culture as Constraint
  82. BOX 3.4 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: THE CROWN
  83. Rationalization and Time Use
  84. Consumerism
  85. From Counterculture to Subculture
  86. Cultural Capital
  87. Virtual Culture as Freedom and Constraint
  88. Summary
  89. CHAPTER 4 Socialization
  90. The Consequences of Social Isolation in Childhood
  91. BOX 4.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE SPACE BETWEEN US
  92. Formation of the Self
  93. Freud
  94. Cooley’s Symbolic Interactionism
  95. Mead
  96. At the Intersection of Biography and History
  97. A Sociology of the Life Course
  98. Age Cohort
  99. Generation
  100. How Socialization Works
  101. Theories and Agents of Socialization
  102. Families
  103. Schools: Functions and Conflicts
  104. Symbolic Interactionism and the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  105. Peer Groups
  106. The Mass Media
  107. BOX 4.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: CYBER-BULLYING
  108. The Mass Media and the Feminist Approach to Socialization
  109. Resocialization and Total Institutions
  110. Socialization and the Flexible Self
  111. Self-Identity and the Internet
  112. BOX 4.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: SELF-TRANSFORMATION: EXTREME MAKEOVER AND ITS SPINOFFS
  113. Summary
  114. CHAPTER 5 Social Interaction
  115. The Building Blocks of Interaction
  116. BOX 5.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: SUITS
  117. BOX 5.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: WE LIVE IN PUBLIC
  118. Feminist Theory and Emotions
  119. Emotion Management
  120. Emotion Labour
  121. Emotions in Historical Perspective
  122. Conflict Theories of Social Interaction
  123. Competing for Attention
  124. Power and Social Interaction
  125. BOX 5.3 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: HAVE SOCIAL MEDIA RUINED INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION?
  126. Power and Position
  127. Symbolic Interaction
  128. Goffman’s Dramaturgical Analysis
  129. Ethnomethodology
  130. Verbal and Nonverbal Communication
  131. From Small Processes to Big Structures
  132. BOX 5.4 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: DOES NEGOTIATING SOCIAL ORDER TAKE TOO MUCH TIME AND ENERGY?
  133. Summary
  134. CHAPTER 6 Networks, Groups, Bureaucracies, and Societies
  135. Beyond Individual Motives
  136. The Holocaust
  137. How Social Groups Shape Our Actions
  138. BOX 6.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: GROUP LOYALTY OR BETRAYAL?
  139. Social Networks
  140. It’s a Small World
  141. Finding a Job
  142. Urban Networks
  143. Online Networks
  144. The Building Blocks of Social Networks
  145. BOX 6.2 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: WESTWORLD
  146. Is Group Loyalty Always Functional?
  147. Love and Group Loyalty
  148. Primary and Secondary Groups
  149. Benefits of Group Conformity
  150. Disadvantages of Group Conformity
  151. Groupthink and Bystander Apathy
  152. Group Conformity, Group Conflict, and Group Inequality
  153. Groups and Social Imagination
  154. Bureaucracies
  155. Bureaucratic Inefficiency
  156. Bureaucracy’s Informal Side
  157. BOX 6.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE ZOOKEEPER’S WIFE
  158. Leadership
  159. Overcoming Bureaucratic Inefficiency
  160. Societies
  161. Foraging Societies
  162. Pastoral and Horticultural Societies
  163. Agricultural Societies
  164. Industrial Societies
  165. Postindustrial Societies
  166. Postnatural Societies
  167. Freedom and Constraint in Social Life
  168. Summary
  169. PART 3 Inequality
  170. CHAPTER 7 Deviance and Crime
  171. The Social Definition of Deviance and Crime
  172. The Difference between Deviance and Crime
  173. Sanctions
  174. BOX 7.1 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: VIOLENCE AND HOCKEY: DEVIANT, CRIMINAL, OR NORMATIVE?
  175. Measuring Crime
  176. BOX 7.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: SHOULD MARIJUANA BE LEGALIZED?
  177. Criminal Profiles
  178. Explaining Deviance and Crime
  179. Symbolic Interactionist Approaches to Deviance and Crime
  180. Functionalist Explanations
  181. BOX 7.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: HELL OR HIGH WATER
  182. BOX 7.4 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: BETTER CALL SAUL
  183. Conflict Theories
  184. Feminist Contributions
  185. Social Control and Regulation
  186. Internal and External Social Control
  187. Trends in Social Control
  188. The Medicalization of Deviance
  189. The Prison
  190. Moral Panic
  191. Alternative Forms of Punishment
  192. Summary
  193. CHAPTER 8 Social Stratification
  194. Patterns of Social Inequality
  195. Shipwrecks and Inequality
  196. Economic Inequality in Canada
  197. Explanations of Income Inequality
  198. Income vs. Wealth
  199. BOX 8.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: SHOULD WEALTH TRUMP WORK?
  200. Income and Poverty
  201. Explaining Poverty
  202. BOX 8.2 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT PROVIDE A GUARANTEED INCOME?
  203. Theories of Stratification
  204. Conflict Perspectives
  205. Power
  206. BOX 8.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE HUNGER GAMES
  207. BOX 8.4 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: TREME: HOW INEQUALITY SHAPES DISASTER
  208. Social Mobility
  209. Perceptions of Class Inequality
  210. Summary
  211. CHAPTER 9 Globalization, Inequality, and Development
  212. The Creation of a Global Village
  213. The Triumphs and Tragedies of Globalization
  214. The Sources and Contours of Globalization
  215. Globalization in Everyday Life
  216. BOX 9.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: CAN WORK CONDITIONS BE IMPROVED IN CLOTHING FACTORIES IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES?
  217. The Sources of Globalization
  218. BOX 9.2 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: THE AMAZING RACE
  219. A World Like the United States?
  220. Globalization and Its Discontents: Anti-Globalization and Anti-Americanism
  221. The History of Globalization
  222. Development and Underdevelopment
  223. Levels and Trends in Global Inequality
  224. Modernization Theory: A Functionalist Approach
  225. Dependency Theory: A Conflict Approach
  226. Core, Periphery, and Semiperiphery
  227. Neoliberal vs. Democratic Globalization
  228. Globalization and Neoliberalism
  229. Foreign Aid, Debt Cancellation, and Tariff Reduction
  230. BOX 9.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: CAPTAIN PHILLIPS
  231. Democratic Globalization
  232. Summary
  233. Notes
  234. CHAPTER 10 Race and Ethnicity
  235. Defining Race and Ethnicity
  236. The Great Brain Robbery
  237. Race, Biology, and Society
  238. Ethnicity, Culture, and Social Structure
  239. BOX 10.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: ZOOTOPIA
  240. Ethnic and Racial Stratification in Canada
  241. Canadian Multiculturalism
  242. BOX 10.2 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: SHOULD WE RECRUIT FEWER IMMIGRANTS AND VISIBLE MINORITIES?
  243. Race and Ethnic Relations: The Symbolic Interactionist Approach
  244. Labels and Identity
  245. Ethnic and Racial Labels: Imposition vs. Choice
  246. BOX 10.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: MASTER OF NONE
  247. Conflict Theories of Race and Ethnicity
  248. Internal Colonialism
  249. BOX 10.4 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: IS THE NATIONAL INQUIRY INTO MISSING AND MURDERED INDIGENOUS WOMEN AND GIRLS NEEDED?
  250. The Theory of the Split Labour Market and the Case of Asian Canadians
  251. Some Advantages of Ethnicity
  252. The Future of Race and Ethnicity in Canada
  253. Summary
  254. CHAPTER 11 Sexualities and Gender Stratification
  255. Sex, Intersex, Gender, Transgender
  256. Sex and Intersex
  257. Theories of Gender
  258. Essentialism: Sociobiology and Evolutionary Psychology
  259. Functionalism and Essentialism
  260. A Critique of Essentialism from the Conflict and Feminist Perspectives
  261. Social Constructionism and Symbolic Interactionism
  262. Gender Segregation and Interaction
  263. The Mass Media and Body Image
  264. BOX 11.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: TODDLERS & TIARAS
  265. Male–Female Interaction
  266. Sexuality
  267. Sexuality and Resistance
  268. Enforcing Heteronormativity
  269. BOX 11.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE IMITATION GAME
  270. Gender Inequality
  271. The Origins of Gender Inequality
  272. The Women’s Movement
  273. Gender Inequality in the Labour Market
  274. Eliminating the Gender Gap in Earnings
  275. Male Aggression against Women
  276. BOX 11.3 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: DOES A RAPE CULTURE EXIST ON UNIVERSITY AND COLLEGE CAMPUSES?
  277. Summary
  278. CHAPTER 12 Sociology of the Body: Disability, Aging, and Death
  279. Thinking about the Human Body Sociologically
  280. BOX 12.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: ROBOCOP
  281. Society and the Human Body
  282. The Body and Social Status: A Feminist Interpretation
  283. Disability
  284. Disability in Canada
  285. The Social Construction of Disability
  286. Rehabilitation and Elimination
  287. Ableism
  288. Challenging Ableism: The Normality of Disability
  289. BOX 12.2 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: FROM MALCOLM IN THE MIDDLE TO SPEECHLESS
  290. Aging
  291. The Sociology of Aging
  292. Population Aging in Canada and Around the World
  293. Intergenerational Tensions: A Conflict Interpretation
  294. Death and Dying
  295. BOX 12.3 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: NEGOTIATING THE AMBIGUITY BETWEEN SOCIAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEATH
  296. BOX 12.4 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED DEATH: NOT FOR THOSE WITH A MENTAL ILLNESS
  297. Summary
  298. PART 4 Institutions
  299. CHAPTER 13 Work and the Economy
  300. The Promise and History of Work
  301. Salvation or Curse?
  302. Economic Sectors and Revolutions
  303. “Good” vs. “Bad” Jobs
  304. The Deskilling Thesis
  305. BOX 13.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: ARE YOU PREPARED FOR DIGITAL TAYLORISM?
  306. A Critique of the Deskilling Thesis
  307. The Social Relations of Work
  308. Labour Market Segmentation
  309. Worker Resistance and Management Response
  310. BOX 13.2 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: SUPPORTING A REDUCED WORKWEEK
  311. Unions and Professional Organizations
  312. Barriers between the Primary and Secondary Labour Markets
  313. The Time Crunch and Its Effects
  314. The Problem of Markets
  315. Capitalism, Communism, and Democratic Socialism
  316. Capitalism
  317. BOX 13.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: DRAGONS’ DEN
  318. Communism
  319. BOX 13.4 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE BIG SHORT
  320. Democratic Socialism
  321. The Corporation
  322. Globalization
  323. Globalization in the Less Developed Countries
  324. The Future of Work and the Economy
  325. Summary
  326. CHAPTER 14 Politics
  327. Introduction
  328. Free Trade and Democracy
  329. What Is Politics? Key Terms
  330. BOX 14.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: GAME OF THRONES
  331. Theories of Democracy
  332. A Functionalist Account: Pluralist Theory
  333. Conflict Approaches I: Elite Theory
  334. BOX 14.2 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: INCREASING THE PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN IN CANADIAN POLITICS
  335. BOX 14.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE IDES OF MARCH
  336. Conflict Approaches II: Marxist Rejoinders to Elite Theory
  337. Conflict Approaches III: Power Resource Theory
  338. Conflict Approaches IV: State-Centred Theory
  339. The Future of Democracy
  340. Two Cheers for Russian Democracy
  341. The Three Waves of Democracy
  342. The Social Preconditions of Democracy
  343. Postmaterialism and the Dilemma of Canadian Politics
  344. Politics by Other Means
  345. War
  346. Terrorism and Related Forms of Political Violence
  347. Summary
  348. Notes
  349. CHAPTER 15 Families
  350. Is “The Family” in Decline?
  351. Functionalism and the Nuclear Ideal
  352. Functional Theory
  353. Foraging Societies
  354. The Canadian Family in the 1950s
  355. Conflict and Feminist Theories
  356. The Gender Division of Labour
  357. Mate Selection
  358. Love and Mate Selection
  359. BOX 15.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
  360. Marriage and Cohabitation
  361. Living Apart Together
  362. Same-Sex Marriage and Civil Unions
  363. BOX 15.2 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: THE REAL O’NEALS
  364. Divorce
  365. Predictors of Divorce
  366. Consequences of Divorce
  367. Economic Hardship
  368. Reproduction
  369. Reproductive Choice
  370. BOX 15.3 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: MEDICAL ABORTION: A NEW OPTION FOR CANADIAN WOMEN
  371. Reproductive Technologies
  372. Zero-Child Families
  373. Lone-Parent Families
  374. Step-Parent Families
  375. Family Policy
  376. Summary
  377. CHAPTER 16 Religion
  378. Religion and Society
  379. Theoretical Approaches to the Sociology of Religion
  380. Durkheim’s Functionalist Approach
  381. BOX 16.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: FROM DUCK DYNASTY TO THE YOUNG POPE
  382. Religion, Feminist Theory, and Conflict Theory
  383. Weber and the Problem of Social Change: A Symbolic Interactionist Interpretation
  384. The Rise, Decline, and Partial Revival of Religion
  385. The Rise of Religion
  386. The End of Religion?
  387. BOX 16.2 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: PRAYER IN CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
  388. The Market Theory
  389. The Future of Religion
  390. Religion around the World
  391. Religious Tolerance
  392. Religious Affiliation in Canada
  393. BOX 16.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: SILENCE
  394. Religiosity
  395. Summary
  396. CHAPTER 17 Education
  397. The Riot in St. Léonard
  398. Mass Education: An Overview
  399. Uniform Socialization
  400. Rising Levels of Education
  401. BOX 17.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: IS GRADE INFLATION HARMFUL?
  402. Individual Advantages and Disadvantages
  403. The Rise of Mass Schooling
  404. Mass Schooling and National Wealth
  405. BOX 17.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: IS VIRTUAL LEARNING A GOOD IDEA?
  406. The Functions of Education
  407. Latent Functions
  408. Manifest Functions: The Logic of Industrialism
  409. Cultural Homogeneity and Solidarity
  410. Common School Standards
  411. National Solidarity
  412. Sorting into Classes and Hierarchies: A Conflict Perspective
  413. BOX 17.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: MR. D
  414. Economic Barriers to Higher Education
  415. BOX 17.4 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: THE LOTTERY
  416. Exclusion, Credentialism, and Professionalization
  417. Cultural Capital and Control
  418. Reproducing Inequality: The Contribution of Symbolic Interactionism
  419. The Hidden Curriculum
  420. Testing and Tracking
  421. Self-Fulfilling Prophecies
  422. BOX 17.5 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: IS SCHOOL ENOUGH?
  423. Prospects and Challenges for Education in Canada
  424. Gender Differences: A Feminist Perspective
  425. Participation and Indigenous Background
  426. International Competition
  427. Summary
  428. CHAPTER 18 Mass Media and Mass Communication
  429. The Significance of the Mass Media
  430. Illusion Becomes Reality
  431. What Are the Mass Media?
  432. BOX 18.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: YOU THE JURY
  433. The Rise of the Mass Media
  434. Causes of Media Growth
  435. Theories of Media Effects
  436. Functionalism
  437. Conflict Theory
  438. BOX 18.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: CANADIAN BROADCASTING AND GOVERNMENT REGULATION
  439. Interpretive Approaches
  440. BOX 18.3 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: SNOWDEN
  441. Feminist Approaches
  442. Centralized Control and Resistance on the Internet
  443. Access
  444. Content
  445. Internet Advertising
  446. Biased Algorithms
  447. Online Piracy vs. Net Neutrality
  448. Countertrends: The Rise of Social Media
  449. Summary
  450. CHAPTER 19 Health and Medicine
  451. The Black Death
  452. Health and Inequality
  453. Defining and Measuring Health
  454. The Social Causes of Illness and Death
  455. BOX 19.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: INSIDE OUT
  456. Health Care and Medicine
  457. The Canadian Health-Care System: A Conflict Approach
  458. BOX 19.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: A MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS ON CANADIAN CAMPUSES
  459. The Power of Medicine
  460. The Social Limits of Modern Medicine
  461. BOX 19.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: THE BIG BANG THEORY
  462. Challenges to Traditional Medical Science
  463. BOX 19.4 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: DO PARENTS HAVE A DUTY TO VACCINATE THEIR CHILDREN?
  464. Summary
  465. PART 5 Social Change
  466. CHAPTER 20 Population and Urbanization
  467. Population
  468. The City of God
  469. The Population “Explosion”
  470. BOX 20.1 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: INFERNO
  471. The Malthusian Trap
  472. A Critique of Malthus
  473. Demographic Transition Theory
  474. Population and Social Inequality
  475. BOX 20.2 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK: HOW CAN WE FIND 120 MILLION MISSING WOMEN?
  476. Urbanization
  477. From the Preindustrial to the Industrial City
  478. The Chicago School and the Industrial City
  479. After Chicago: A Critique
  480. The Corporate City
  481. Rural Communities
  482. The Postmodern City
  483. BOX 20.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: GIRLS
  484. Summary
  485. CHAPTER 21 Collective Action and Social Movements
  486. How to Spark a Riot
  487. The Study of Collective Action and Social Movements
  488. Non-Routine Collective Action
  489. The Vancouver Riot of 1907
  490. Breakdown Theory: A Functionalist Approach to Collective Action
  491. Assessing Breakdown Theory
  492. Social Movements
  493. Solidarity Theory: A Conflict Approach
  494. BOX 21.1 SOCIAL POLICY: WHAT DO YOU THINK?: STATE SURVEILLANCE OF DEMONSTRATIONS
  495. Strikes and the Union Movement in Canada
  496. Resource Mobilization
  497. Political Opportunities
  498. Social Control
  499. Framing Discontent: A Symbolic Interactionist Approach
  500. Examples of Frame Alignment
  501. An Application of Frame Alignment Theory: Back to 1968
  502. The History and Future of Social Movements
  503. The Past 300 Years
  504. New Social Movements
  505. BOX 21.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: V FOR VENDETTA
  506. BOX 21.3 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: MR. ROBOT
  507. Summary
  508. Note
  509. ONLINE CHAPTER 22 Technology and the Global Environment
  510. Technology: Saviour or Frankenstein?
  511. BOX 22.1 SOCIOLOGY ON TV: BATTLESTAR GALACTICA
  512. Technology and People Make History
  513. How High Tech Became Big Tech
  514. Environmental Degradation
  515. BOX 22.2 SOCIOLOGY AT THE MOVIES: WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES
  516. The Social Construction of Environmental Problems: A Symbolic Interactionist View
  517. The Social Distribution of Environmental Risk
  518. BOX 22.3 IT’S YOUR CHOICE: THE CANADIAN OIL PIPELINE DEBATE
  519. What Is to Be Done? Functionalist vs. Conflict Solutions
  520. The Market and High Technology
  521. A Workable Strategy?
  522. Evolution and Sociology
  523. Summary
  524. Notes
  525. Refrences
  526. Index