1/ Why is "framing" and lit review so contentious in sociology? A thread for #soctwitter and assorted bystanders.
2/ Last week, our department had a very nice panel where faculty answered questions publishing. Panel included current/former editors/deputy editors of ASR, AJS, Contexts, Soc of Ed, SPQ and more. (Yes, our dept is super professional and service oriented).
3/ Most advice was simple and intuitive: keep revising, show your work, read the journal you submit to, take rejection in stride, accept the randomness of reviews, etc. BUT the discussion of framing and lit review was long and complex.
4/ So, what's the deal? Why does that create nightmare for sociologists? My theory: It combines literary writing and politics in a way that doesn't match the positivist ethos of journal based sociology.
5/ To get my point, you have to buy into my description of the lit review/framing in sociology. In physcial science, you may get about 1 page of lit review before you dive into the study, often less. In sociology, you get a 5-10 pages reviewing the lit 2 justify the problem.
6/ So why does brain surgery research need about 500 words of justification while sociologists need about 5,000 words? It's bonkers. But here's why:
7/ Reason: residual humanism. Sociology got started in the 19th century and we get rid of the "must review everything" mode of scholarship.
8/ Reason: personal safety. Basically, you can't get a big pub unless there is nearly unanimous agreement. So if you piss off one reviewer, the whole thing is off. Losing peer reviewers because you forgot 1 citation is just dropping the ball. So you have a big, lit review.
9/ Reason: Lit review/framing is essentially a rhetorical exercise in building a coalition for your paper. That requires a lot of hemming and hawing and qualifications. It is also an admission that your paper lives and dies based on its popularity, not how well executed it is.
10/ Reason: sociology is a relatively low consensus field. Basically, when there is disagreement on what counts as quality science/scholarship, you need some way to manage the reader. You can't persuade with research design alone. You need to be more discursive and rhetorical.
11/Bottom line: framing is a nightmare for sociology because it's a throwback to pre-positivist social science, it's about politics, it's about low consensus, and it's basically a "personal safety" move designed to thwart reviewers. No wonder it gives us nightmares!
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1/ #Impeachment: a failed Constitutional design. Some basic data shows it doesn't do its job. (retweet w/edits)
2/ The US has had 46 presidents, 49 VPS, 115 Supreme court justices, hundreds of senators and cabinet members and federal judges, and thousands of Representatives. How many impeachments? Keep reading to find out!
Answer: The US House info website lists a paltry 21 impeachements, 8 convictions, and 3 resigned... over 245 years! Impeachment might as well not exist. history.house.gov/Institution/Im…
1/ #Impreachment: a failed Constitutional design. Some basic data shows it doesn't do its job.
2/ The US has had 46 presidents, 49 VPS, 115 Supreme court justices, hundreds of senators and cabinet members and federal judges, and thousands of Representatives. How many impeachments?
3/ Answer: The US House info website lists a paltry 21 impeachements, 8 convictions, and 3 resigned. history.house.gov/Institution/Im…
1/ Do you like the idea of teaching social theory instead of intellectual history? If you do, assign my book and I will do the following things for you... amazon.com/Theory-Working…
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1/ Moderate Republicans are the most important people in the world right now. More comments on the #ElectoralCollegelRiot from a political sociologist.
2/ Right now, we have a severe problem: as long as you can gather up a critical number of primary voters, you can do some very horrible things, like incite a riot that gets 2 police officers killed.
3/ So what can be done? Part of the solution is relatively easy: criminal charges. We need a bright line. Free speech is ok, riots should be met with prison sentences every time.
1/ Something can be very bad but not a coup. More thoughts on the #ElectoralCollegeRiot from a professor who studies protest.
2/ Some folks are concerned that by calling this a riot, rather than coup, you are implictely dismissing what is happening. Not true. By using hyperbole, you are platforming people who should be marginalized and ignored.
3/ From a social science perspective, the #ElectoralCollegeRiot fits a long term pattern of political riots aimed at harming or intimidating others, such as anti-Black race riots and political urban riots of earlier American history.
1/ Comments on pro-Trump protest from a professor who studies protest. Step #1: These protests are more performance, less coup.
2/ Protests vary in their goals and tactics. While pro-Trump/MAGA protests may claim that a conspiracy altered the election, the truth is probably more mundane.
3/ The #ElectoralCollegeRiot likely represents the alt.right's attempt to grab the spotlight one last time before Dem's control the legislature and White House.