Power and Status Vol: 20


Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9780762310302
Published:
Publisher:
JAI Press Inc.
Dimensions:
298 pages - 150 x 225 x 20mm
Series:
Advances in Group Processes
List price £97.99 List price €138.99 List price $174.99

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Categories:
"Advances in Group Processes" publishes theoretical analyses, reviews and theory based empirical chapters on group phenomena. Volume 20, the second volume of a five-series set, includes papers that address fundamental issues of power and status. Chapter one integrates social influence network theory with core ideas from affect control theory and the expectation states programme. The second chapter compares reciprocal exchange to negotiated exchange in terms of the power development, trust and perceptions of fairness. Chapter three examines the entire population of unique exchange networks up to size nine, giving predictions using power dependence theory and the resistance branch of network exchange theory. As a set, these chapters address major issues of power in social exchange relations. The next four chapters are aimed at important issues of status in groups. Chapter four theorizes the complex connection between power and status, showing that power can produce status only if negative emotional reactions are mitigated. This analysis sheds new light on theories of collective action. Chapter five extends reward expectations theory by offering a new model of allocative behaviour, and comparing that model to previously collected data. The sixth chapter extends status construction theory to incorporate the effect of social identification. This new formulation is then tested and supported with data from thirty five dot-com organizations. The final two chapters incorporate theories of legitimacy to provide insights into power and status. Chapter eight reviews and explicates the basic principles of legitimacy in the Zelditch and Walker research programme. This paper traces the successes and failures of two dozen studies across several decades. Finally, chapter nine uses legitimacy theory to resolve two anomalies in the status literature, one dealing with gender saliency and the other with the enactment of identity- versus status-related behaviours. Overall, the volume includes papers that reflect a wide range of theoretical approaches to power and status and contributions by major scholars that work in the general area of group processes.

Attitude change, affect control, and expectation states in the formation of influence networks, N.E. Friedkin, E.C. Johnsen; Power, trust, and fairness - theoretical comparisions of forms of exchange, L.D. Molm; Exchange networks - an analysis of all networks up to size 9, M.A.L.M. van Assen; Power, status, and collective action - developing fundamental theories to address a substantive problem, M.J. Lovaglia et al.; Reward expectations and allocative behaviors - a mathematical model, M.H. Fisek, D.G. Wagner; The role of social identity processes in status construction, L. Troyer; Working on status puzzles, M. Webster, Jr.; The legitimacy of regimes, M. Zelditch, H.A. Walker; Consideration of legitimacy processes in teasing out two puzzles in the status literature, C. Johnson.

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