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Back Matter Source: Social Forces, Vol. 59, No. 3 (Mar., 1981), pp. 893-897 Published by: Oxford University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2578229 . Accessed: 11/06/2014 00:45 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Oxford University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Social Forces. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 188.72.96.81 on Wed, 11 Jun 2014 00:45:29 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

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Back MatterSource: Social Forces, Vol. 59, No. 3 (Mar., 1981), pp. 893-897Published by: Oxford University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2578229 .

Accessed: 11/06/2014 00:45

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Oxford University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Social Forces.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Back Matter

Referees

We record our gratitude to colleagues listed below. Their reviews, in the past year, of several hundred MSS. have been a service to authors, to the journal, and through them, to the profession.

Acock, Alan Birdsall, Stephen Akin, John S. Black, James A. Albrecht, Milton Blalock, Hubert M. Albrecht, Stan Blumberg, Paul Aldous, Joan Blumberg, Rhoda Lois Alford, Robert R. Boggs, Sarah Almquist, Elizabeth Bogue, Allen G. Althauser, Robert Bogue, Donald J. Andersen, Ronald Bollen, Kenneth Angrist, Shirley S. Bonacich, Edna Archer, Dane Borgatta, Edgar F. Atchley, Robert C. Boskoff, Alvin Athens, Lonnie H. Boyd, Monica Azar, Edward Bradshaw, Benjamin Babchuk, Nicholas Breiger, Ronald L. Bach, Robert Bridges, William Back, Kurt Brinkerhoff, Merlin B. Bacon, Selden Burkett, Steven R. Baker, Paul J. Burstein, Paul Ball, Richard A. Burt, Ronald S. Balswick, Jack 0. Butler, Edgar W. Bane, Mary Jo Buttel, Frederick H. Barlow, Hugh Carlton, Richard A. M. Baum, Bernard H. Carpenter, David B. Bean, Frank D. Carpenter, G. Russell Becker, Howard S. Chadwick, Bruce Begun, James W Champion, Dean Belcher, John Chilton, Roland J. Bennett, Sheila K. Chirot, Daniel Berg, Ivar Choldin, Harvey Bergesen, Albert J. Clemente, Frank Bernstein, Ilene Cobas, Jose A. Beza, Angell Cohen, Albert K. Bibb, Robert C. Cohen, Lawrence Biderman, Albert D. Cohler, Bertram Bierstedt, Robert Coleman, James S. Biggar, Jeanne C. Costner, Herbert L. Billings, Dwight Cowgill, Donald 0. Binderman, Murray Crane, Diana

893

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Page 3: Back Matter

894 / Social Forces Volume 59:3, March 1981

Cumming, Elaine Freedman, Marcia Curtis, Richard F. Freedman, Ronald Cutler, Stephen J. Freese, Lee Cutright, Phillips Freidheim, Elizabeth Cuzzort, Ray Frideres, James S. Daft, Richard L. Friedman, Judith J. Danigelis, Nicholas L. Fuguitt, Glenn V. Danziger, Sheldon Gaede, Stan Darroch, Gordon Gaertner, Karen Dashefsky, Arnold Gamson, William Davis, James A. Gamier, Maurice Davis, Murray Gecas, Viktor Day, Dawn Geschwender, James Dean, Dwight Gibbons, Don C. Deegan, Mary Jo Gibbons, W. Eugene De Fleur, Melvin Gibbs, Jack P. Della Fave, L. Richard Gillis, A. Ronald Demerath, N. J. III Glazer, Nathan Deutscher, Irwin Glenn, Evelyn Nakano Dillman, Donald Glenn, Norval Dinitz, Simon Glick, Paul C. Dizard, Jan E. Glock, Charles Y. Dodder, Richard A. Goffman, Erving Donaldson, Peter J. Gold, Martin Douglas, Jack Gordon, Robert A. Dowd, James Goss, Mary E. W. Driedger, Leo Gove, Walter R. Duncan, Otis D. Granberg, Donald 0. Ekland-Olson, Sheldon Grandjean, Burke Ember, Melvin Granovetter, Mark Epstein, Joyce Grasmick, Harold Erickson, Bonnie H. Greenberg, David Espenshade, Thomas Gross, Edward Falk, Frank R. Guest, Avery M. Fallding, Harold J. Gusfield, Joseph Farber, Bernard Guterbock, Thomas M. Farley, Reynolds Hadden, Jeffrey K. Feagin, Joe R. Hagan, John L. Fein, Helen Hage, Jerald Feld, Scott Halaby, Charles N. Fellman, Gordon A. Hall, Richard Fendrich, James Haller, Archibald 0. Fernandez, Celestino Hailinan, Maureen T. Ferrell, Mary Z. Hamblin, Robert L. Fichter, Joseph Hamilton, Richard Fischer, Claude Hansen, Kristin Fischer, Edward H. Hanson, Robert Fisher, Wesley Hanushek, Eric A. Foley, John W. Harkess, Shirley J. Form, William Hartnagel, Timothy F. Fox, Greer Litton Hauser, Robert M. Frazier, Charles Hawkins, Richard 0.

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Referees I 895

Heaton, Tim B. Lewis, Catharine Heer, David M. Lewis, David T. Hendershot, Gerry E. Lewis, Michael Hiller, Dana V. Light, Ivan Hillery, George A. Lincoln, James R. Himes, Joseph S. Lindsay, Paul Hobbs, Daryl Linsky, Arnold S. Hogan, Dennis P. Lipset, Seymour M. Hoge, Dean R. Lofland, John F. Holmstrom, Linda Lytle Loftin, Colin K. Horan, Patrick M. Logan, Charles H. Hout, Michael Logan, John R. Huber, Joan Long, Larry H. Hughes, Michael D. Luebke, Paul Humphrey, Craig R. McCarthy, John D. Imershein, Allen W. Mackinnon, Neil J. Jackman, Mary McLaughlin, Steven D. Jacobs, James B. Macmillan, Alexander Jenkins, J. Craig McPherson, Barry D. Jensen, Gary F. McRoberts, Hugh A. Jiobu, Robert M. Macke, Anne S. Johnson, Benton Maddox, George L. Johnson, Leanor B. Marsden, Mary Ellen Johnson, Michael P. Marshall, Harvey H. Jones, Robert Marshall, James R. Kahana, Eva F. Marshall, Susan Kandel, Denise Martin, Elizabeth Kantrowitz, Nathan Marwell, Gerald Kaplan, Berton H. Mayer, Egon Karp, David A. Mazur, Allan Karsh, Bernard Messinger, Sheldon L. Katz, Daniel Meyer, Katherine Katz, Fred E. Micklin, Michael Keech, William R. Miller, Arthur Keely, Charles B. Miller, S. M. Kemper, Theodore D. Mills, Edgar W Kennedy, Robert E., Jr. Mol, Johannis Kerckhoff, Alan C. Mohm, Linda D. Kimberly, John R. Montagna, Paul D. Kitano, Harry L. Moore, Joan W. Klobus-Edwards, Patricia A. Moore, Wilbert E. Knoke, David Mortimer, Jeylan T. Knudsen, Dean D. Moskos, Charles C. Kohn, Melvin Moss, J. J. Krohn, Marvin D. Mott, Frank L. Kruttschmitt, Candace M. Mullins, Nicholas C. Kutner, Nancy G. Munger, Frank La Free, Gary D. Nagel, Joane Land, Kenneth C. Neal, Arthur G. Larkin, Ralph W. Newman, Dorothy K. Lee, Gary R. Nolan, Patrick D. Leik, Robert K. Nye, F. Ivan

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Page 5: Back Matter

896 / Social Forces Volume 59:3, March 1981

Ogmundson, Richard L. Sanders, William B. Olsen, Marvin E. Savitz, Leonard D. Olson, Sheldon R. Scanzoni, John Orcutt, James D. Schaefer, Richard T. Ornstein, Michael D. Schlechty, Phillip C. Orum, Anthony M. Schneider, David J. Osmond, Marie W. Schneider, Joseph W. Otto, Luther B. Schoenherr, Richard A. Palen, J. John Schulze, Robert Palmer, Stuart Schwartz, Barry Palmore, Erdman B. Schwartz, Joel Pampel, Fred C. Schwartz, Mildred A. Parelius, Ann P. Schwirian, Kent P. Pavalko, Ronald M. Segal, David R. Payne, David E. Segal, Mady W. Pearlin, Leonard I. Seigfried, John Peck, Jennifer Semyonov, Moshe Petersen, William Shepard, Jon M. Peterson, William Short, James F., Jr. Pettigrew, Thomas F. Shover, Neal Pfeffer, Jeffrey Shulman, Norman Phillips, David P. Siegel, Paul Pitcher, Brian L. Simkus, Albert A. Pitts, James P. Simmons, Roberta Portes, Alejandro Skocpol, Theda Poston, Dudley L. Slatin, Gerald T. Powers, Edward A. Sly, David F. Presser, Stanley Smith, Kent W. Preston, Samuel H. Snow, Robert P. Psathas, George Somers, Robert H. Quarantelli, Enrico Sorensen, Aage B. Ragin, Charles C. Sorensen, Robert C. Rankin, Joseph H. Speare, Alden Reskin, Barbara F. Spector, Malcolm B. Richer, Stephen Spilerman, Seymour Richter, Maurice N. Spreitzer, Elmer A. Riecken, Henry W. Stack, Steven J. Ritchey, Neal Stafford, Mark C. Ritzer, George Stanfield, John H. Rodman, Hyman Stark, Rodney W. Rogler, Lloyd H. Stebbins, Robert A. Rosen, Bernard C. Steffensmeier, Darrell J. Rosenberg, Morris A. Stephan, Cookie White Rosenfeld, Jeffrey P. Stephens, Susan A. Rosenfeld, Rachel A. Stern, Alan Rosengren, William R. Stoddard, Ellwyn R. Rozman, Gilbert Stolzenberg, Ross M. Rubinson, Richard Street, James A. Ryder, Norman B. Stycos, J. Mayone Sachar, Jane Summers, Gene F. Saloff, Janet Sussman, Marvin B. Sanders, Joseph Suttles, Gerald D.

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Page 6: Back Matter

Referees I 897

Sweet, James A. Waite, Linda J. Sweetser, Dorrian Apple Walum, Laurel R. Swidler, Ann Wardwell, Walter I. Sydie, Rosalind A. Wax, Murray L. Sykes, Gresham M. Waxman, Chaim I. Taeuber, Karl E. Webster, Murray, J. Taylor, Patricia A. Wechsler, Henry Teevan, James J. Weinberg, Martin S. Thomas, Gail E. Weinstein, Eugene Thrall, Charles A. Weisman, Carol S. Tickamyer, Ann R. Westie, Frank R. Tilly, Charles Westoff, Charles F. Tiryakian, Edward A. White, Harrison C. Tittle, Charles R. Whyte, Martin K. Toby, Jackson Wilken, Paul H. Tolbert, Charles M. Wilson, John Treas, Judith Wilson, Kenneth L. Trice, Harrison M. Wilson, William J. Tuma, Nancy B. Wimberley, Ronald C. Turk, Austin T. Wolff, Kurt H. Turk, Herman Wolfgang, Marvin E. Turner, Jonathan H. Wright, Sonia R. Tyree, Andrea Wuthnow, Robert J. Useem, Michael Yancey, William L. Vaillancourt, Jean-Guy Yetman, Norman R. van den Berghe, Pierre L. Yinger, J. Milton Veevers, Jean E. Zahn, Margaret A. Vigderhous, Gideon Zald, Mayer N. Volkart, Edmund H. Zola, Irving K. Voss, Harwin L. Zurcher, Louis A., Jr. Wagner, David G.

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sociology Journal of the British Sociological Association

Quarterly

Editor: Professor Philip Abrams

SOCIOLOGY, the journal of the British Sociological association, is widely recog- nised as the leading British journal in the field, the journal which covers all that i's of importance in British sociology, publishing articles which report the results of significant research together with speculative and controversial contributions to major sociological debates.

As well as major articles, there are sections for DEBATES, extended REVIEW ARTICLES, BOOK REVIEWS and SHORTER NOTICES.

Contributors to past issues have included: Basil Bernstein; Stan Cohen; Norbert Elias; Tony Giddens; John Goldthorpe; David Lane; David Lockwood; Steven Lukes; John Rex; Margaret Stacey; Peter Worsley.

SOCIOLOGY is published by the BSA in February, May, August and November

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BSA members 7.5G 16.00* 18.00* Non-member individuals 16.00 19.00 19.00 Institutions ** 18.00 21.50 21.50

Special rate to members of the American Sociological Association $30.00 * represents overseas membership fee which includes sociology subscription ** subject to review and possible increase in 1981

BACK NUMBERS Individual copies ?6.50 each, including postage Special offer on complete back run (Vols 1-14): UK ?155 Overseas ?160 (inc p&p)

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Page 8: Back Matter

Research in Service to Society The First Fifty Years of the Institute for Research

in Social Science at the University of North Carolina by Guy Benton Johnson and Guion Griffis Johnson

A clearly written and informative social history of a pioneering academic research organization and of the work of its distinguished founder, Howard W. Odum. The Institute

for Research in Social Science, founded in 1924, quickly achieved a national reputation for exploring the contro- versial topics that impeded the movement of the South

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Research in Service to Society describes the origin and early struggles of the Institute, the mechanics of its

operation, and the researches of its staff members on such subjects as race relations, labor, farm tenancy, prison

reform, and local government. Special attention is given to Odum's development of the concept of regionalism, as well as to the Institute's transformation in more recent decades

in response to the use of computer technology in social science research. approx. 440 pp., $20.00

The University of North Carolina Press Post Office Box 2288 Chapel Hill, NC 27514

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Gender and Culture KIBBUTZ WOMEN REVISITED Melford E. Spiro Foreword by Weston LaBarre

Spiro describes the counter-revolution that has occurred in male and female roles in the Israeli kibbutz. "This much needed book not only places the current women's liberation movement in vast evolutionary perspective, it addresses itself to issues central to anthropological theory. Spiro takes ideological issues out of the fire and explores them in multiple contexts. A special gem is that Spiro discusses the development and modification of his own thinking on the basis of more than twenty-five years' experience with the kibbutz movement. Rarely does a scholar admit he has changed his mind. Even more rarely, does he share the entire process and data base for that rethinking and re-evalua- tion." Howard F. Stein Autumn 1979, $9.75

Robert E.rPark BIOGRAPHY OF A SOCIOLOGIST Winifred Raushenbush With a Foreword and Epilogue by Everett C Hughes

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Publisher pays postage on prepaid orders.

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS 6697 College Station / Durham, North Carolina 27708

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Marx Against Marxism The International Yearbook of JULIUS LOEWENSTEIN Organization Studies 1980 Leo Baek Prize Winner Edited by DAVID DUNKERLEY and Thanslated by Harry Drost GRAEME SALAMAN This book traces the origins, contradic- Plymouth Polytechnic; The Open tions and consequences of Marx's University teachings on his followers. Loewen- This series was conceived in order to stein uses Marx's own words to speak bring together contemporary develop- against the rigid dogmatism inherent in ments in the field of organization much of Marxism, and concentrates on studies. This Yearbook, the second to the interpretations of Marx's work by be published, contains twelve articles Max Weber. on such topics as corporate strategy $20.00 and organizational studies, workers'

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The Politics of Population in Brazil ELITE AMBIVALENCE AND PUBLIC DEMAND By Peter McDonough and Amaury DeSouza The population of Brazil has increased tenfold, from 10 to over 100 million, in the last 100 years. This book examines the attitudes toward population planning of Brazilian government officials and other elites in comparison with mass public opinion. The authors' findings that elites seriously underestimate the desire for family planning services, while the public views birth control as a basic issue, represent an important contribution on a timely issue. 192 pp., $19.95

Mobility and Integration in Urban Argentina C6RDOBA IN THE LIBERAL ERA By Mark D. Szuchman Between the 1870s, when the great influx of European immigrants began, and the start of World War I, Argentina underwent a radical alteration of its social composition and patterns of economic productivity. Szuchman examines the occupational, residen- tial, educational, and economic patterns of mobility of some four thousand men, women, and children who resided in Cordoba, Argentina's most important interior city, during this changeful era. 290 pp., $19.95

The Population of the South STRUCTURE AND CHANGE IN SOCIAL DEMOGRAPHIC CONTEXT Edited by Dudley L. Poston, Jr., and Robert H. Weller Preface by Daniel 0. Price Reports on some of the most pertinent research dealing with fertility, mortality, and migration and the factors which influence the unique socioeconomic and cultural char- acteristics of the southern population. Questions are raised about whether the present convergence of patterns with the rest of the United States represents a permanent trend-possibly due to increased communication-or whether further divergence may be expected in the future. 288 pp., $25.00

The Territorial Experience HUMAN ECOLOGY AS SYMBOLIC INTERACTION By E. Gordon Ericksen Foreword by Herbert Blumer Durng the 1 920s the Chicago school of sociology developed an ecological orientation toward the study of the city. At the same time, oti,er Chicago scholars developed the social psychological approach that was to be named symbolic interactionism. Ericksen examines the best of these two schools to present a revisionist human ecology. With people living in a habitat which they have largely shaped for themselves-a world of airports, shopping malls, retirement villages-Ericksen demands that we examine what we have done with our environment in order to survive and prosper. 224 pp., $18.95

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FOR YOUR COURSES... A unique contribution to the literature on race relations

THE SOCIOLOGY

OF RACE RELATIONS Reflection and Reform

Edited by THOMAS F PETTIGREW, Harvard University

This new book of readings, edited by Thomas F Pettigrew, Pro- fessor of Social Psychology and Sociology at Harvard, chroni- cles the triumphs and failures of race relations as seen and analyzed by sociologists who wrote about the phenomenon dur- ing various eras throughout this century. The Sociology of Race Relations contains: * Forty-five articles drawn from four of the most respected jour-

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THE CULTURE OF PUBLIC PROBLEMS

Drinking-Driving and the Symbolic Order

Joseph R. Gusfield Using drinking and

driving as a case-example of a public prob- lem, Gusfield emphasizes the role of language and ritual in creating a sense of order and authority in human behavior.

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