Academic literature on the topic 'Neo-Marxian social class'

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Journal articles on the topic "Neo-Marxian social class"

1

Wright, Erik Olin. "Foundations of a neo-Marxist class analysis." Sociology: Theory, Methods, Marketing, Stmm 2019 (1) (March 22, 2019): 9–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/sociology2019.01.009.

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The author lays out the distinctive features of a neo-Marxist class approach used in present-day sociology. First, he clarifies what exactly constitutes the fundamental point of class analysis within the Marxist framework and what it tries to accomplish. This work also provides a description of similarities and differences between the Weberian and Marxist traditions with regard to the conceptual components and pivotal explanatory ambitions. The distinctive hallmark of the Marxian approach is that it defines the concept of social class in terms of exploitation. In Wright’s view, the theoretical
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2

Li, J. H., and J. Singelmann. "Social Mobility among Men: A Comparison of Neo-Marxian and Weberian Class Models." European Sociological Review 15, no. 1 (1999): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a018250.

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3

Ng, Sek-Hong. "Electronics Technicians in an Industrialising Economy: Some Glimpses on the ‘New Middle Class’." Sociological Review 34, no. 3 (1986): 611–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.1986.tb00691.x.

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The ‘New Working Class’ theory, popularised in French sociology during the 1960s and 1970s, envisages the advent of a politically inspired class movement that rekindles the vision of a new social order as the technicians rise to become its vanguard. According to writers like Mallet and Touraine, these technical ‘white-collars’ tend to take over from the traditional manual groups in posing as the ‘standard-bearers’ of class-based industrial radicalism and solidarity. This paper proposes to trace the recent vein of discussions on the class implications of occupational and technological transform
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4

Muntaner, Carles, Carme Borrell, Judit Solà, et al. "Capitalists, managers, professionals and mortality: Findings from the Barcelona Social Class and All Cause Mortality Longitudinal Study." Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 37, no. 8 (2009): 826–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1403494809346870.

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Aims: To examine the effects of Neo-Marxian social class (i.e. measured as relations of control over productive assets) and potential mediators such as labour-market position, work organization, material deprivation and health behaviours upon mortality in Barcelona, Spain. Methods: Longitudinal data from the Barcelona 2000 Health Interview Survey (n = 7526) with follow-up interviews through the municipal census in 2008 (95.97% response rate) were used. Using data on relations of property, organizational power, and education, social classes were grouped according to Wright’s scheme: capitalists
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5

Novrinda, Herry, and Dong-Hun Han. "Oral Health Inequalities among and Within Neo-Marxian Social Classes in South Korea: A Nationwide Cross-sectional Study." Asian Journal of Social Health and Behavior 6, no. 4 (2023): 156–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/shb.shb_186_23.

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Introduction: The objectives of this study were to examine the association between the neo-Marxian social class (NMSC) and oral health indicators, to determine the role of mediating factors in social class inequalities, and to assess the relationship between a combination of two subjective indicators and normative dental treatment needs (NDTN) according to the NMSC. Methods: Data were from the 4th Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007–2009 with 6710 respondents aged 19–54. The outcomes were self-reported oral health (SROH), self-perceived unmet dental needs (SPUDN), and
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Sholahudin, Umar. "MEMBEDAH TEORI KRITIS MAZHAB FRANKFURT : SEJARAH, ASUMSI, DAN KONTRIBUSINYA TERHADAP PERKEMBANGAN TEORI ILMU SOSIAL." Journal of Urban Sociology 3, no. 2 (2020): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.30742/jus.v3i2.1246.

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This article aims to examine the critical theory of the Fraknfurt school, especially those related to its history, concepts, assumptions, and contributions. Historically-geneologically, critical theory was born from the womb of Marxist theory. Although born from the womb of Marxist theory, critical theory is not too satisfied with the analysis of the Marxians who are considered too mechanistic economic determinism in seeing the social reality of Western capitalist society. According to critical theory, the Marxian analysis in viewing and analyzing the inequality of the reality of capitalist so
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7

Rupert, Mark. "Globalising common sense: a Marxian-Gramscian (re-)vision of the politics of governance/resistance." Review of International Studies 29, S1 (2003): 181–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260210503005953.

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The impoverishment of mainstream International Relations (IR) scholarship, especially as it is practised in the bastions of academic power and respectability in the United States, can be registered in terms of its wilful and continuing conceptual blindness to mutually constitutive relations of governance/resistance at work in the production of global politics. This has been underscored in recent years by the rise of powerful transnational social movements seeking to reform or transform global capitalism, a coalition of coalitions recently reincarnated in the form of a global peace movement opp
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Sanford, Barbara. "The Political Economy of Land Development In Nineteenth Century Toronto." Articles 16, no. 1 (2013): 17–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1017943ar.

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This paper challenges traditional ecological assumptions about urban growth and development by exploring the relationship between social structure and urban pattern. A neo-marxian analysis is used to examine the ways in which changing social, political and economic forces of Canadian society affected the distribution of social classes in urban space during three periods of Toronto's early growth; 1) the colonial period, 1791-1833; 2) the mercantile period, 1834-1850; and 3) the early industrial period, 1851-1881. The town's original land grants were allocated according to social status, physic
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9

De Moortel, Deborah, Laia Palència, Lucía Artazcoz, Carme Borrell, and Christophe Vanroelen. "Neo-Marxian social class inequalities in the mental well-being of employed men and women: The role of European welfare regimes." Social Science & Medicine 128 (March 2015): 188–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.01.027.

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10

Ogbonna, Hyginus Obinna. "A Monograph on Theoretical Understanding of the Contradictions of Vested Interests and Underdevelopment in Peripheral Social Formation." Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 12, no. 4 (2021): 130. http://dx.doi.org/10.36941/mjss-2021-0034.

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This paper focuses on theoretical understanding of the contradictions of vested interests and the underdevelopment in the peripheral social formations; having as its raison d'être, to explore the possible ways by which the vested interests of a particular social group or class has contributed in shaping the underdevelopment of the periphery in the global economy –with inferences from a sub-Saharan African country, Nigeria (with empirical-based evidences); and moving forward, to find ways to counteract or mitigate these contradictions for the amelioration of the human condition in the periphery
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