Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Methods Papers
Academic Papers focused on methods
6
Other
Graduate
07/26/2012

Additional Other Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Ryder, 1965
Definition

“The cohort as a concept in the study of social change.” American Sociological Review, 30(6), 843-861.

 

Purpose of essay is to direct the attention of sociologists toward the study of cohorts in contradistinction to conventional period analyses

 


- Cohorts experience the same historical event very differently

 


- The continual emergence of new participants in social processes and the continual withdrawal of their predecessors compensate the society for limited individual flexibility

 


- A cohort’s size matters for individual experiences/opportunities

 


- The composition of the cohort also matters (this may be important for marriage prospects, for instance)

 


- Common wisdom suggests that young adults tend to act as an impetus for social change

 

            - Have less invested in the status quo

 


- Ryder describes schools as “cohort-creators”

 


- The schooling process gives the cohort time to identify itself as a historical entity

 


- Furthermore, schools promote independent thought to the extent that what they teach differs from what individuals learn at home

 

 

Term
hobcraft 1982
Definition

Seminal Age Cohort Period -

says is deceiving because none are actual determinants of behavior but refers to difficulties in identification

Term
Guillot 2006
Definition

- tempo effects in mortality- Cohort mortality is different from life-table period mortality.  The expectation of life someone would live now is not much beyond the cohort.

 

Term

Henry 1960 -

 

Definition
developed orphanhood method of meausring parental survival most useful for measuring maternal mortalities not so much fathers.
Term

glei and horiuchi

Definition

- discusses why uniform changes in mortality might affect life expectancies of men and women differently


Issue of Variance

 

Term

Pollak 1986

 

Definition
– 2 sex problem refers to fertility. Specifically in seeking to define a stable pop and intrinsic growth rate demographers often only rely on maternity and fertility schedules when in fact men have a role to play in the reproductive process and incroproating their schedules may lead to inconsistences.
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