1,191 research outputs found
A Social Relational Account of Affect
Sociology usually conceives of emotions as individual, episodic, and
categorical phenomena, while at the same time emphasizing their social and
cultural construction. In this article, I argue that this view neglects some
essential elements of emotions, in particular affects, and how these are vital
to our understanding of sociality. Although affect is an established notion in
sociology, it has remained conceptually underdeveloped. The article therefore
discusses different perspectives on affect from the vibrant field of affect
studies that emphasize their relational and bodily character. In a second
step, I contrast and reconcile these views with existing theories of affect in
sociology and social psychology and consider a number of essential
characteristics that can be used to circumscribe affect. Finally, I introduce
concepts from relational sociology and concrete examples to specify the
relational character of affect and to develop an understanding of affect that
is both theoretically and empirically fruitful
Economic Insecurity and the Globalization of Production
A common claim in debates about globalization is that economic integration increases worker insecurity. Although this idea is central to both political and academic debates about international economic integration, the theoretical basis of the claim is often not clear. There is also no empirical research that has directly tested the relationship. In this paper, we argue that economic insecurity among workers may be related to riskier employment and/or wage outcomes, and that foreign direct investment may be a key factor contributing to this increased risk by making labor demands more elastic. We present new empirical evidence, based on the analysis of panel data from Great Britain collected from 1991-1999, that FDI activity in the industries in which individuals work is positively correlated with individual perceptions of economic insecurity. This relationship holds in yearly cross-sections, in a panel accounting for individual-specific effects, and in a dynamic panel model also accounting for individual-specific effects.
Labor-Market Competition and Individual Preferences Over Immigration Policy
This paper uses an individual-level data set to analyze the determinants of individual preferences over immigration policy in the United States. In particular, we test for a link from individual skill levels to stated immigration-policy preferences. Different economic models make contrasting predictions about the nature of this link. We have two main empirical results. First, less-skilled workers are significantly more likely to prefer limiting immigrant inflows into the United States. The result is robust to several different econometric specifications which account for determinants of policy preferences other than skills. Our finding suggests that over time horizons relevant to individuals when evaluating immigration policy, individuals thank that the U.S. economy absorbs immigrant inflows at least partly by changing wages. These preferences are consistent with a multi-cone' Heckscher Ohlin trade model and with a factor-proportions-analysis labor model. Second that less-skilled workers in high-immigration communities are especially anti-immigrationist. If anything, our evidence suggests attenuation of the skills-preferences correlation in high-immigration communities. These preferences are inconsistent with an area-analysis labor model.
Emotion regulation and emotion work: two sides of the same coin?
This contribution links psychological models of emotion regulation to
sociological accounts of emotion work to demonstrate the extent to which
emotion regulation is systematically shaped by culture and society. I first
discuss a well-established two-factor process model of emotion regulation and
argue that a substantial proportion of emotion regulatory goals are derived
from emotion norms. In contrast to universal emotion values and hedonic
preferences, emotion norms are highly specific to social situations and
institutional contexts. This specificity is determined by social cognitive
processes of categorization and guided by framing rules. Second, I argue that
the possibilities for antecedent-focused regulation, in particular situation
selection and modification, are not arbitrarily available to individuals.
Instead, they depend on economic, cultural, and social resources. I suggest
that the systematic and unequal distribution of these resources in society
leads to discernible patterns of emotion and emotion regulation across groups
of individuals
Public Finance and Individual Preferences over Globalization Strategies
In the absence of distortionary tax and spending policies, freer immigration and trade for a country would often be supported by similar groups thanks to similar impacts on labor income. But government policies that redistribute income may alter the distributional politics. In particular, immigrants may pay taxes and receive public services. Imports, obviously, can do neither of these. This suggests quite different political coalitions may organize around trade and immigration. In this paper we develop a framework for examining how pre-tax and post-tax cleavages may differ across globalization strategies and also fiscal jurisdictions. We then apply this framework to the case of individual immigration and trade preferences across U.S. states. We have two main findings. First, high exposure to immigrant fiscal pressures reduces support for freer immigration among natives, especially the more-skilled. Second, there is no public-finance variation in opinion over trade policy, consistent with the data that U.S. trade policy has negligible fiscal-policy impacts. Public-finance concerns appear to be crucial in shaping opinions towards alternative globalization strategies.
Public Finance and Individual Preferences Over Globalization Strategies
In the absence of distortionary tax and spending policies, freer immigration and trade for a country would often be supported by similar groups thanks to similar impacts on labor income. But government policies that redistribute income may alter the distributional politics. In particular, immigrants may pay taxes and receive public services. Imports, obviously, can do neither of these. This suggests quite different political coalitions may organize around trade and immigration. In this paper we develop a framework for examining how pre-tax and post-tax cleavages may differ across globalization strategies and also fiscal jurisdictions. We then apply this framework to the case of individual immigration and trade preferences across U.S. states. We have two main findings. First, high exposure to immigrant fiscal pressures reduces support for freer immigration among natives, especially the more-skilled. Second, there is no public-finance variation in opinion over trade policy, consistent with the data that U.S. trade policy has negligible fiscal-policy impacts. Public-finance concerns appear to be crucial in shaping opinions towards alternative globalization strategies.
The Emotional Timeline of Unemployment: Anticipation, Reaction, and Adaptation
Unemployment continues to be one of the major challenges in industrialized societies. Aside from its economic dimensions and societal repercussions, questions concerning the individual experience of unemployment have recently attracted increasing attention. Although many studies have documented the detrimental effects of unemployment for subjective well-being, they overwhelmingly focus on life satisfaction as the cognitive dimension of well-being. Little is known about the emotional antecedents and consequences of unemployment. We thus investigate the impact of unemployment on emotional well-being by analyzing the frequency with which specific emotions are experienced in anticipation of and reaction to job loss. Using longitudinal data of the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and fixed effects regressions, we find that becoming unemployed leads to more frequent experiences of unpleasant emotions only in the short run and that adaptation occurs more rapidly as compared to life satisfaction. Contrary to existing studies, we find decreases in emotional well-being but not in life satisfaction in anticipation of unemployment
a multidimensional Scale Based on a Three-Country Study
We develop and test a multidimensional scale measuring national
identification. Drawing on the extant literature on nations and national
identity, we propose national identification as an understanding of how
individuals subjectively and dynamically relate to different characteristics
of nations that we operationalize as the dimensions of symbolic, civic, and
solidary identification. We discuss the development of a number of
questionnaire items representing each of these dimensions and report results
of various validity and reliability tests using data from three surveys we
conducted in England, Germany, and Poland. Results in general confirm the
three-dimensional structure of the overall construct while at the same time
suggesting country-specific adaptations to the scale
Emotional roots of right-wing political populism
The rise of the radical populist right has been linked to fundamental socioeconomic changes fueled by globalization and economic deregulation. Yet, socioeconomic factors can hardly fully explain the rise of new right. We suggest that emotional processes that affect people’s identities provide an additional explanation for the current popularity of the new radical right, not only among low- and medium-skilled workers, but also among the middle classes whose insecurities manifest as fears of not being able to live up to salient social identities and their constitutive values, and as shame about this actual or anticipated inability. This link between fear and shame is particularly salient in competitive market societies where responsibility for success and failure is increasingly individualized, and failure is stigmatized through unemployment, being on welfare benefits, or labor migration. In these conditions, we identify two psychological mechanisms behind the rise of the new populist right. The first mechanism of ressentiment explains how negative emotions -- fear and insecurity, in particular -- transform through repressed shame into anger, resentment, and hatred towards perceived “enemies” of the self and associated social groups, such as the refugees, the immigrants, the long-term unemployed, the political and cultural elites, and the “mainstream” media. The second mechanism is emotional distancing from social identities that inflict shame and other negative emotions, and instead seeking meaning and self-esteem from those aspects of identity that are perceived to be stable and to some extent exclusive, such as nationality, ethnicity, religion, language, and traditional gender roles.Peer reviewe
The emotional timeline of unemployment: Anticipation, reaction, and adaption
Unemployment continues to be one of the major challenges in industrialized societies. Aside from its economic dimensions and societal repercussions, questions concerning the individual experience of unemployment have recently attracted increasing attention. Although many studies have documented the detrimental effects of unemployment for subjective well-being, they overwhelmingly focus on life satisfaction as the cognitive dimension of well-being. Little is known about the emotional antecedents and consequences of unemployment. We thus investigate the impact of unemployment on emotional well-being by analyzing the frequency with which specific emotions are experienced in anticipation of and reaction to job loss. Using longitudinal data of the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) and fixed effects regressions, we find that becoming unemployed leads to more frequent experiences of unpleasant emotions only in the short run and that adaptation occurs more rapidly as compared to life satisfaction. Contrary to existing studies, we find decreases on emotional well-being but not in life satisfaction in anticipation of unemployment
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