The Sociology of the Professions: SAGE PublicationsSAGE, 26 ก.ย. 1995 - 240 หน้า This much-needed book provides a systematic introduction, both conceptual and applied, to the sociology of the professions. Keith Macdonald guides the reader through the chief sociological approaches to the professions, addressing their strengths and weaknesses. The discussion is richly illustrated by examples from and comparisons between the professions in Britain, the United States and Europe, relating their development to their cultural context. The social exclusivity that professions aim for is discussed in relation to social stratification, patriarchy and knowledge, and is thoroughly illustrated by reference to examples from medicine and other established professions, such as law and architecture. The themes of the book are drawn together in a final chapter by means of a case study of accountancy. |
จากด้านในหนังสือ
หน้า 13
... capitalism' brought into existence 'the three great classes' (Capital) - or two (The Communist Manifesto) (Marx in McLellan, 1977: 222, 506), or the Registrar General's five categories. Any change in the class structure is explained in ...
... capitalism' brought into existence 'the three great classes' (Capital) - or two (The Communist Manifesto) (Marx in McLellan, 1977: 222, 506), or the Registrar General's five categories. Any change in the class structure is explained in ...
หน้า 22
... capitalist relations of production. The clearest example of the former is to be found in Johnson (1980), who examines the relative merits of Marxian and Weberian analyses of the development of the professions and comes down in favour of ...
... capitalist relations of production. The clearest example of the former is to be found in Johnson (1980), who examines the relative merits of Marxian and Weberian analyses of the development of the professions and comes down in favour of ...
หน้า 23
... capitalist mode of production on which the society is based and for which Marx had worked out an economic theory which he believed explained the laws of motion of that society. Furthermore, his materialist theory of human society argues ...
... capitalist mode of production on which the society is based and for which Marx had worked out an economic theory which he believed explained the laws of motion of that society. Furthermore, his materialist theory of human society argues ...
หน้า 26
... capitalist corporation mobilize the expert information needed to govern society or to control production and markets' (1990: 48). Her paper concludes with what appears to be a dismissal of symbolic interactionism because it studies ...
... capitalist corporation mobilize the expert information needed to govern society or to control production and markets' (1990: 48). Her paper concludes with what appears to be a dismissal of symbolic interactionism because it studies ...
หน้า 28
... capitalist market society, is none the less something that in important ways is the outcome of the actions of the members of society, especially their collective actions. However a group may originate, if it has an interest to pursue ...
... capitalist market society, is none the less something that in important ways is the outcome of the actions of the members of society, especially their collective actions. However a group may originate, if it has an interest to pursue ...
เนื้อหา
36 | |
Professions and the state | 66 |
The problem of ethnocentrism | 71 |
England | 72 |
Law | 73 |
Medicine | 77 |
Summary | 78 |
The United States of America | 79 |
Three cases of professional formation | 105 |
Architecture | 107 |
Accountancy | 109 |
The state professions and historical change | 114 |
Conclusion | 119 |
Notes | 122 |
Patriarchy and the professions | 124 |
Women and modern society | 126 |
Medicine | 82 |
Summary | 83 |
France | 85 |
Medicine | 88 |
Germany | 89 |
Law | 91 |
Medicine | 92 |
Summary | 94 |
State crystallizations | 96 |
Conclusion | 98 |
Notes | 99 |
Professions and the state | 100 |
State formation and professional autonomy | 101 |
Social closure the special case of patriarchy | 129 |
Caring professions | 133 |
Mediation | 134 |
Indeterminacy | 135 |
Objectivity | 137 |
Social closure in nursing and midwifery | 138 |
Midwifery | 144 |
Uncaring professions | 149 |
Work knowledge science and abstraction | 163 |
Conclusion | 183 |
Building respectability | 197 |
Author index | 218 |
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คำและวลีที่พบบ่อย
Abbott achieve action activities actors analysis aspect assets associations autonomy Britain British Burrage capital capitalist chapter Chartered Accountants class formation cognitive concept context cultural doctors dominant economic elite emerged emphasized empirical established example existence fact fessional Foucault France Freidson functionalist Halliday ICAEW important indeterminacy institutions interest Johnson jurisdiction knowledge base knowledge-based occupations labour Larson lawyers legal profession legislation Mann Marx Marxian means medical profession medicine middle class midwifery midwives modern society monopoly Murphy nineteenth century notion nursing objectives organizations panopticon Parkin particular patriarchy political position practice practitioners problem professional bodies professional knowledge professional project refers reform registration regulation relation relations of production Royal Charter seen significant social class social closure social mobility social stratification sociological sociologists status strategies structure theme theoretical theory traditional Weber Weberian Witz women