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WORKING ON STATUS PUZZLES

Power and Status

ISBN: 978-0-76231-030-2, eISBN: 978-1-84950-217-7

Publication date: 14 November 2003

Abstract

Basic science, sometimes called “curiosity-driven research” at the National Science Foundation and other places, starts with a question that somehow stays in the mind, nagging for an answer. Such questions really are “puzzles”; they arise in an intellectual field or context, asking someone to fit pieces to an improving but incomplete picture of the social world. What makes a worthwhile puzzle is a missing part in understanding the picture, or a new piece of knowledge that does not seem to fit among other parts. Sometimes creative theorists can imagine a solution to one of the holes in the puzzle. If they are also empirical scientists, they devise ways to get evidence bearing on their ideas, and some of those ideas survive to give more complete and detailed pictures of the world. This chapter is the story of puzzles and provisional solutions to them, developed by dozens of men and women investigating status processes and status structures, using a coherent perspective, for over half a century.1

Citation

Webster, M. (2003), "WORKING ON STATUS PUZZLES", Thye, S.R. and Skvoretz, J. (Ed.) Power and Status (Advances in Group Processes, Vol. 20), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 173-215. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0882-6145(03)20007-2

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2003, Emerald Group Publishing Limited