1st Edition

Status, Power, and Legitimacy

Edited By Morris Zelditch Copyright 1998
    379 Pages
    by Routledge

    388 Pages
    by Routledge

    Status, Power, and Legitimacy presents methodological, theoretical, and empirical essays by Joseph Berger and Morris Zelditch, Jr.two of the leading contributors to the Stanford tradition in the study of micropro-cesses. This three-part volume brings together major contributions to the development of this tradition, in addition to a number of newly written essays published here for the first time. Berger and Zelditch integrate the essays and relate them to a larger body of theory and research as they explore the importance of a generalizing orientation in sociology. Their view of theory as flux and process, the blending of social process with theory-building, produces a picture of the social world in line with the great tradition of George Herbert Mead, Max Weber, and Georg Simmel.

    Status, Power, and Legitimacy explores the relation between the scope of a theory and testing, applying, and developing it; the relation between abstract, general theories and empirical generalizations; and how to use an understanding of this relation to construct theories that are neither historically nor culturally bound. In the first part, Berger and Zelditch discuss strategies of theory construction, the development of abstract, general theories of social processes, and the different ways in which theories grow. Status processes are the focus of the second part, which includes: the formation of reward expectations; the role of status cues in interaction; the evolution of status expectations; and the application of status characteristics theory to male-female interaction. Lastly, the authors dissect power and legitimacy: the effect of expectations on power; the legitimation of power and its effect on the stability of authority; and legitimation under conditions of dissensus.

    This volume is a fine theoretical effort of great depth and breadth. Berger and Zelditch review the background of each paper, place the new concepts and principles introduced by each paper in context and examine subsequent research generated by the paper. They carve out new research areas in the social world of class, status, power, and authority. This volume will be of interest to those in the fields of sociology and, in particular, social theory.

    I: Strategies; 1: Introduction to Part I: Strategies of Theory Construction; 2: Generalizing and Historical Orientations in Sociology; 3: A Working Strategy for Constructing Theories: State Organizing Processes; 4: Theoretical Structures and the Micro-Macro Problem; 5: Theoretical Research Programs: A Reformulation; II: Status Processes; 6: Introduction to Part II: Status Processes; 7: Formation of Reward Expectations in Status Situations; 8: Status Cues, Expectations, and Behavior; 9: The Evolution of Status Expectations: A Theoretical Extension; 10: Status Inconsistency in Task Situations: A Test of Four Status Processing Principles; 11: Gender and Interpersonal Task Behaviors: Status Expectation Accounts; III: Power and Legitimation Processes; 12: Introduction to Part III: Power and Legitimation Processes; 13: Expectations, Shared Awareness, and Power; 14: Uncertainty, Potential Power, and Nondecisions; 15: Legitimacy and the Stability of Authority; 16: Consensus, Dissensus, and Justification; Contributors

    Biography

    Morris Zelditch