The Sexual Division of Labour and Women's Heterogeneity Catherine Hakim The British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 47, No. 1. (Mar., 1996), pp. 178-188. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0007-1315%28199603%2947%3A1%3C178%3ATSDOLA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-1 The British Journal of Sociology is currently published by The London School of Economics and Political Science. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www.jstor.org/journals/lonschool.html. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. The JSTOR Archive is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to leading academic journals and scholarly literature from around the world. The Archive is supported by libraries, scholarly societies, publishers, and foundations. It is an initiative of JSTOR, a not-for-profit organization with a mission to help the scholarly community take advantage of advances in technology. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. http://www.jstor.org Fri Nov 16 11:12:22 2007 Catherine Hakinl The sexual division of labour and women's heterogeneity The comments by Bruegel and by Ginn et al. (hereafter the Eleven)on my article 'Five feminist myths about female employmenť (Hakim 1995b)do not constitute a step forward in research and debate on female employment. Bruegel agreeswith meon all main issues;herdisagreements are on points of detail rather than fundamental substance and are presented too briefly to be clear. The Eleven provide a catalogue of selective evidence of the kind that characterizes advocacy research rather than detached and dispassionate social science. What they say is generally arguable. The problem is that they do not give the complete story and the parts they leave out change our conclusions fundamentally. T o takejust one example, the Eleven quote a paper by Rubery et al. showing that women part-timersare'overqualifieď fortheirjobs, but failtomention that the paper also shows full-timers tobe similarly 'overqualifieď for theirjobs. The paper also shows that it is full-time workers, men and women, who most often wish to change their employer if they could, not part-timers. This ishardly consistentwith the notion that employers exploit part-timers in particular. They also fail to note that in the same paper part-timers report theirjobs tobejust assecureand permanent asfull-timejobs-so this can hardly be the cause of higher turnover among part-timers (Rubery et al. 1994:214,225,227).There isa greatdeal of valuable research evidence in this source and other recent publications that the Eleven similarly ignore. On balance, the research evidence shows that part-time work does not changeawoman's primary self-identityasa housewife,doesnot change her bargaining power and weight in decision-makingand does not change her role in the household. From a sociological perspective, part-timers can be grouped with housewives rather than with wage workers in aggregate data. We cannot expect the expansion of part-time work to be the catalyst for social and economicchange, and this is the key point about the myth of rising female employment, which the Eleven do not even address. It will not do for social scientists to be economical with the truth, giving one half of the story but failing to mention the inconvenient evidence. Socialscientists aresupposed totake accountofallthe evidencerather than relying on sample selection bias and selective perception to support personal convictions. Rnt. /*I. O / SIK MIIITC~ ISSN 1MK)i-I315 @l.o*tdonSchml ,f)/Ecnttomtrr 1996VOIUW ,LO 47 Irsttr *to. I 1596 179Thesexual division of labour and women's heterogeneity The unpalatable truth is that a substantial proportion of women still accept the sexual division of labour which sees homemaking as women's principal activity and income-earning as men's principal activity in life. This acceptance of differentiated sex roles underlies fundamental differences between the work orientations, labour market behaviour and life goals of men and women (Hakim 1991, 1996b). The proportion of women who accept the homemaker role varies from half to two-thirds, depending on the precise formulation of the sexual division of labour presented to them in interview surveys. It is true that attitudes and expectations are changing, among both men and women. But not as fast nor as completely as some commentators would have us believe. It is precisely because changes in attitudes are partial, uneven, moving at different speeds in different social groups and cultures, that we now have a heterogeneous and polarizing population of adult women. A few women have rejected the sexual division of labour. Apart from the isolated defiant souls that occur in all societies and all times, such women are generally the most highly educated, most highly motivated women who are the cause of a sudden sharp increase in the female share of professional, managerial and other highly-paid occupations in Britain in the 1980s (Hakim 1992: 136). They are found everywhere, in all countries, East and West, but the size of the minority varies from the invisible few thousands to the more vociferous minority that gets its voice heard. However most women still go along with the sexual division of labour, many actively preferring it and colluding with men, others not sufficiently inconvenienced by it to be willing to make a stand against it. Whether they are labelled as the victims of false consciousness or not, or simply foolish, is a matter of intellectual taste. The acceptability of the sexual division of labour clearly owes something to the fact that most women choose to spend a part of their life producing children and rearing them, and they prefer to be supported financially by someoneelse while they are doing it, either a husband or the state. Another reason is that the sexual division of labour can be efficient and mutually advantageous, as rational choice theorists keep pointing out (Becker 1991:54- 79). Whatever the reason, it is widely accepted, and not only by the men who gain from the arrangement but also by women, because they too perceive themselves as gaining from it. I agree with Bruegel and the Eleven that the key issue is the explanation for women's position in the workforce. The reason the five mythsi described in my article are feminist myths is that they all rest on the assumption that women reject the role of full-time homemaker; that they seek to participate in the labour market on exactly the same basis as men, so that sex differentials in work rates or within the workforce can be read as the effects of discrimination rather than personal choice; and that as soon as the barriers come down, women will flood into wage work on a full-time basis if at all possible. I held this view once. My own research proved me wrong. Catherine Hakim TABLE I: Westernviews on the roles of men and women. Percentage disagreeing with these two statements: A A husbanďsjob is to earn the money; a wife'sjob is to look after the home andfamily B Being a housewife isjust asfu&lling as workingfor pay Separate roles Housewife job Men Women Men Women Britain USA Irish Republic West Germany 47 47 40 33 .58 52 50 35 33 22 17 29 36 2 1 24 32 Source: 1988 International Social Survey Programme data reported in Scott, Braun and Alwin (1993: 30-1). 'SHE MODERN SEXUAL DIVISION OF LABOUR Most surveys measure attitudes somewhat crudely in terms of acceptance or rejection of statements proposing a complete division of labour between wives and husbands, in the sense that income-earning is presented as an exclusively male function and home-making as an exclusively female function. This approach is illustrated in the International Social Survey Programme's item 'A husbanďs job is to earn the money; a wife's job is to look after the home and family' which is often treated as a measure of 'modernity' in attitudes. Throughout the 1980s and intothe 1990sthis statement (orequivalents) attracted roughly 50per cent of men and women disagreeing and 50 per cent agreeing or indifferent, in the USA, Britain and other European countries, with attitudes fluctuating over time but broadly balanced (Witherspoon 1988: 189; Scott 1990:57; Kiernan 1992:97-99; Scott, Braun and Alwin 1993:34; Haller and Hoellinger, 1994: 102). In Germany, Italy, Austria and Hungary, support for the statement is stronger than disagreement. For example only one-thirdof German men and women reject the sexual division of labour compared to half in Britain (Table I). Attitudes to the housewife role are less ambivalent and more positive, with a majority of women as well as men agreeing that it can bejust as fulfilling as working for pay; only one-third in Britain and Germany and even fewer in the USA reject the idea (Table I). However the complete separation of roles has been updated in the postwar decades to accept wives going out to work as a secondary activity. Vogler's landmark study shows that the domestic division of labour is now relative rather than absolute; that attitudesto income-earning can change at a different,faster pace than attitudes to the homekeeping role; and that there are qualitative differences between the work orientations of women 181The sexzlal division of labour and women's heterogeneity working full-time and part-time. The majority of part-timers regard breadwinningas the fmmary (butnot exclusive)responsibility of men, and see women as secondary earners whose fmmary (but not exclusive) responsibility isdomestic work and homemaking. The majority of women working full-time reject both these propositions (Vogler 1994:45,55). One EC Eurobarometer survey provides a unique measure of support, across Europe, for the modern sexual division of labour, which falls half-way between the completely equal sharing of income-earning and domestic functions to separate and parallel roles (Table 11). Roughly one-third of the EC population supported each family model. The egalitarian model attracted most support in Greece, Denmark, Italy and France, followed closely by the Netherlands and UK. The complete separation of roles attracted most support in Luxembourg, Ireland and Belgium. But in all countries there was a wide spread of support for all three models of the family, none receiving majority support, with the single exception of Greece's majority support for the egalitarian model. This suggests that the 'modern' egalitarian family is really a reversion to a pre-industrial model. Overall, a two-thirds majority of European men and women favour the idea of the working wife,and a two-thirds majority also favour the wife retaining all or the major part of the domestic role. Within countries, differences by sex are negligible except in Greece, Italy and France where men are distinctly less favourable than women towards the egalitarian marriage (European Commission 1984:9).Age has by far the strongest influence on attitudes (Table 11) and in this case we can safely read the results as reflecting generational differences. The key contribution of this survey is that it shows,for all European countries,that people who reject the complete separation of roles for men and women do not necessarilyaccept egalitarian or symmetrical roles: at least half only go as far as supporting a secondary earner role for the wife, who retains the larger share of domestic and childcare work. Attitude surveys have often presented people with a false dichotomy which failed to recognize the modern version of the sexual division of labour, a compromise that stops a long way short of truly egalitarian attitudes (Table 11). T H E LIMITS OF SOCIAL ENGINEERING There have been three important attempts to eliminate the sexual divisionof labour and create symmetrical sex roles: in the Israeli kibbutzim, in Sweden and in China. All three have been partially but not completely successful, revealing that there are limits to what social engineering can achieve. Tables 111 and IV display the relative success of Sweden compared with other European societies and of China compared with other Far Eastern societies.The attitude statement in Table 111proposes the complete separation of roles; the statement in Table IV does not completely exclude wage work for wives. 182 Catherine Hakim TABLE 11: European views on the sexual division of labour. Percentage supporting each of three models of thesexual division of labour Egalitarian Compromise Separate 'Total roles Greece Denmark Italy France Netherlands UK Belgium Ireland West Germany Luxembourg Men 15-24 years 25-39 40-54 55 and over Women 15-24 years 2.5-39 40-54 55 and over 'Total for EC of 10 Notes: 'The question asked: People talk about the changing roles of husband and wife in the family. Here are three kinds of family. Which of them corresponds most with your ideas about the family?: - A family where the two partnerseach havean equally absorbingjoband where housework and the care of the children are shared equally between them. - A family where the wife has a less demandingjob than her husband and where she does the larger share of housework and caring for the children. - A family where only the husband has ajob and the wife runs the home. - None of these three cases Percentages have been adjusted to exclude the 3% not responding to the question and the 3% choosing the last response. Source: Derived from the Eurobarometer report by European Commission, European Women and Men 1983(1984) In 1993, one-quarter of women aged 20 and over in Britain, France, Germany and the USA agreed with the rigid separation of roles in the statement 'The husband should be the breadwinner, and the wife should stay at home' (Table 111). In Japan and the Philippines two-thirds accepted the complete sexual division of labour. The long-term trend is for declining acceptance and a decade earlier, in 1982,acceptance of the idea was invariably higher, except in the Philippines, even though the earlier survey was limited to women aged 20-59, excluding older women who are usually more conservative in outlook. Sweden demonstrates that Thesexual division of labour and women's heterogeneity TABLE I I I : Thes e w 1 division of labour: East and West comparisons. Percentage of women agreeing with or indifferent to the statement: The husband should be the breadwinner, and the wife should stay at home 1993 1982 Sweden 13 16 UK 2 1 28 France 24 . . Germany 29 38 USA 27 35 Korea 33 . . Japan Philippines 62 67 76 .5 6 Notes: ..Not available Results from nationally representative random samples of 1000 or more women aged 20 and over in 1993 for all countries except Japan where results are based on a nationally representative random sample of 2000 women aged 20 and over interviewed in November 1992. Data for 1982relates to women aged 20-59 years. 'I'he survey covered West Germany only in 1982 but the whole of unified Germany (including East Cermany) in 1993. Source: Calculated from Figure 1-35 in 'I'okyo Metropolitan Government (1994:78). energetically 'egalitarian' policies, which in this context means policies promoting symmetrical roles for men and women and supported by vigorous fiscal and social security rules to prevent backsliding, can substantially change social attitudes: the vast majority (around 85 per cent) of women reject the complete separation of roles. However there remains a stubborn minority of women (16 per cent in 1982 and 13 per cent in 1993) who still accept this design for living, albeit a lower proportion than in the rest of Europe (Table 111). While these results show how malleable attitudes are at the aggregate level, they also point to small minorities of women across Europe whose perspective has not changed, for whom the complete separation of domestic roles remains entirely satisfactory. China demonstrates both these points even more sharply. China implemented the most determined social engineering policy aimed at eradicating the sexualdivisionof labour and associated attitudes. The Marriage Law of 1950 laid down the principles of equality between the sexes, monogamy, freedom to choose marital partners and the right to sue for divorce, marking a break away from Confucian patriarchal values which supported an essentialist conception of the difference between the sexes and sharply segregated roles for men and women (Stockman, Bonney and Sheng 1995: 141-54). The successes and failures of this largest-ever real-world socialexperimentare immensely valuable to social scientists,particularly for the study of women's position in society. Success Catherine Hakim TABLE I V : Far Eastern views on the roles of men and women Beijing Seoul Bangkok Fukuoka Men Women Men Women Men Women Men Women Percentageagreeing with each statement: There are no significant differences of abilities between men and women 70 77 62 67 87 90 55 54 The ideal is for men to have ajob and for women to take care of the family 40 24 69 51 68 71 72 60 If my husband earned enough money I would rather stay at home as a housewife (asked only of married women) . . 35 ~-- ~ -- Notes: . . Not available Source: Calculated from Figures 11L.5-1, 11-5-20, 111-61 and II1-&2 in Ma et al. (1994: 122, 154, 344). The surveys were carried out in 1989 (Fukuoka), 1991 (Seoul), 1992 (Bangkok) and 1993 (Beijing), with representative samples of N = 1736, N = 1608, N = 1570 and N = 1920 respectively. was greatest in eradicating centuries-old perceptions of sex differences in ability and in the practice of male dominance in the household. There was also substantial success in eradicating the sexual division of labour: a low-wage full-employment policy made it necessary for all adults to work and hence for couples to share domestic work as well. However in 1988, after the economic reform programme begun at the end of the 1970shad introduced a new climate of opinion, there was a major public debate over a new trend for women to withdraw from wage work and their reasons for doing so. A survey carried out in Beijing in November 1993showed that one-quarter of all women, one-third of wives and two-fifths of men accepted the sexual division of labour as the ideal to aim for (Table IV). The attitude statement here was worded sufficiently vaguely as not to completely exclude wage work (sociallabour in China),but the relatively large minorities of women (especially wives) agreeing with the sexual division of labour is stillremarkable. Respondents to the surveywere aged 20-69 years (typically30-50 years)and resident in Beijing,thus including the most educated and most cosmopolitan groups in Chinese society, 40 per cent of them professionals and senior administrators, who had lived in a communist society for virtually all their adult lives. Half the wives had earnings similar to or higher than their husbands. The policy of one child per family meant that in 1993, and for the foreseeable future, the great majority of couples had only one child to raise, and they had access to good socialized childcare facilities staffed by professionals. Yet even in 185The sexual division of labour and women3 heterogeneity these most favourable circumstances, a consistent one-third of wives in all age groups (varyingsightly 27 per cent40 per cent) preferred to stay at home as a housewife if their husband earned enough money to permit it. Similarly, acceptance of the sexual division of labour as the ideal was found in all age groups,varying only from 20 per cent for people in their 60s to 38 per cent among people in their 30s. It might be argued in this case that people were simply reverting to traditional patriarchal values which had been suppressed but not abandoned.This might have been so in some rural areas,but not in urban areas, let alone Beijing. The 1993 survey found strongly egalitarian attitudeson all aspectsof family roles and relationships. For example over three-quarters of husbands and wives in all age groups stated that family decisions were made jointly, whereas the husband dominated decisionmaking in Bangkok, Seoul and Fukuoka, the three other cities surveyed. Acceptance of the traditional family division of labour was lowest among people in their 20s,but also among people in their 50s and 60s. It was only among people aged 30-50 that acceptance rose to two-fifths, clearly linked to childcare concerns. Four-fifths of men and women in all age groups thought women should stay at home when a child is young (Maet al. 1994: 122-33, 344-63). This is strong evidence to support Becker's argument that the sexual division of labour in the household can be accepted voluntarily as efficient and mutually advantageous rather than as something imposed on people by custom and patriarchy. The other side of the coin is that only one-third of wives (one-quarter of all women aged 20-69 years) would prefer this option; two-thirds of Chinese wives rejected it firmly, despite the extra burden of combining wage work and domestic work, with consistent views on related topics (Ma et al. 1994; Stockman, Bonney and Sheng 1995: 141-54). The impact of social engineering in China is highlighted by comparisons with almost identical surveys in Bangkok, Seoul and Fukuoka (alarge town in centralJapan with attitudes closer to the national average than to those of Tokyo residents) carried out in 1989-1992 (Table IV). Acceptance of separate sex roles is much higher in Bangkok, Fukuoka and Seoul than in Beijing. The Thai case shows that this is not necessarily related to beliefs about sex differences in abilities, as the Thais do not believe there are any significant differences of ability between men and women, whereas in China this belief had to be eradicated. It appears that the complete separation of roles between men and women will continue to attract support, even if minority support, because it does, as Becker argues, offer certain concrete benefits to couples. The modern version of the sexual division of labour, which is relative rather than total, attracts even greater support. There is no evidence that attitudes cease to be important once women gain access to higher education and better paid jobs. If anything the opposite is the case, as women can afford to choose between competing lifestyles, given homogamy (Table V). A two-thirds majority of women, Catherine Hakim TABLE V: Employment rates by sex role attitudes Percentage of each group in Distribution employment of sample Sex role attitudes Highly Other women Highly Other women qualified qualified Modern Ambivalent 'I'raditional All women aged 20-59 82 65 100 100 Base = 100% 746 2700 746 2700 note.^: .['he highly qualified have tertiary level qualifications, beyond A-level; other women have no qualifications o r only secondary school qualifications. Sex role attitudes were scored on the basis of nine attitude statements, including the ISSP sexual division of labour statement shown in Table I of this paper. Sozrrr~:Calculated from .I'ables 6.21 and 6.22 in Corti et al. (1995:69) reporting 1991 survey results from the British Household Panel Study. whatever their level of education, hold ambivalent views on sex roles, with minorities firmly accepting or rejecting the sexual division of labour. It is well established that higher education qualifications are associated with higher work rates -a 'mark up' of 17percentage points in Table V (65per cent versus 82 per cent). But the impact of sex role attitudes is greater, especially among highly qualified women, producing a 'mark-up' of 28 percentage points in employment rates when modern and traditional women are compared (64 per cent versus 92 per cent). The comments by Bruegel and the Eleven rightly point out that my evidence and discussion were incomplete. Inevitably a journal article could not cover all the topics the Eleven wished me to address. A fuller assessment of the evidence on labour mobility has been made available (Hakim 1995a, 1996b). Further evidence on change over time and the marginal nature of women's part-time jobs is presented in two other articles (Hakim 1994, 1995~).A broader assessment of the evidence for competing explanations of women's social and economic position will be published shortly (Hakim 1996a). We must stop presenting women as 'victims', or as an undifferentiated mass of mindless zombies whose every move isdetermined by other actors and social forces, as the Eleven do. Women are responsible adults, who make real choices and are the authors and agents of their own lives. Some women choose to be home-centred, with work a secondary activity. Some women choose to be career-centred, with domestic activities a secondary consideration. Female heterogeneity is a result of the choices women 187The sexual division of labour and women's heterogeneity make, reflecting not just different but conflicting preferences between two qualitatively different life courses. (Dateaccepted: October 1995) NO'I'E 1. The Eleven claim that I misused the term myth, and really meant mistakes. I used the definition in the Concise Oxford Dictionary of English: 'A purely fictitious narrative embodying popular ideas on natural phenomena etc.'. The feminist myths I describe embody popular feminist ideas on human nature and motivation, on social trends and on women as universal victims. BIBLIOGRAPHY Becker, G. 1991 A Treatise on the Family, London: Harvard University Press. Corti, L., Laurie, H. and Dex, S. 1995 Highly Qualijied Women, Research Series No. 50, London: Employment Depart- ment. European Commission 1984 European Men and Women 1983, Luxembourg. Hakim, C. 1991 'Grateful slaves and self-made women: fact and fantasy in women's work orientations', European Sociological Review 7: 101-2 1. Hakim, C. 1992 'Explaining trends in occupational segregation: the measurement, causes and consequences of the sexual division of labour', European Sociological Review 8: 127-52. Hakim, C. 1994 'A century of change in occupational segregation 1891-1991', Journal of Historical Sociology 7: 435-54. Hakim, C. 1995a Labour Mobility and Employment Stability: Is there a Continuing Sex Differential in Labour Market Behaviour?, Working Paper No. 1, London- . School of Economics, Department of Sociology. Hakim, C. 1995b 'Five feminist myths about women's employmenť, BritishJour- nal of Sociology, 46(3):429-55. Hakim, C. 1995c '1991 Census SARs: CatherineHakim Department of Sociology London School of Economics opportunities and pitfalls in the labour market data', Work, Employment and Society 9: 569-82. Hakim, C. 1996a Key 1.c.cue.r in women'.^ Work: Female Heterogeneity and the Polarisation of Women's Employment, London: Athlone Press. Hakim, C. 1996b 'Labour mobility and employment stability: rhetoric and reality on the sex differential in labour market behaviour', European Sociological Review 12:4 5 4 9 . Haller, M. and Hoellinger, F. 1994 'Female employment and the change of gender roles: the conflictual relationship between participation and attitudes in international comparison', International Sociology 9: 87-1 12. Kiernan, K. 1992 'Men and women at work and at home', pp. 89-1 11 in R. Jowell et al. (eds) Bn'tirh Social Attitudes - the 9th Report, Aldershot, Hants: Gower. Ma Youcai, Wang Zhenyu, Sheng Xuewen and Shinozaki Masami 1994 A Study of L$e and Consciousness in the Contemporary Urban Family in China Research Report on Beijing with Comparis o n ~with Bangkok, Seoul and Fukuoka, Beijing: Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Kitakyushu Forum on Asian Women. Rubery, J., Horrell, S. and Burchell, B. 1994 'Part-time work and gender inequality in the labour markeť, pp. 205- 34 in A. M. Scott (ed.) Gender Segregation and Social Change, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Scott, J. 1990 'Women and the family, pp.51-76 in R. Jowell et al. 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You have printed the following article: The Sexual Division of Labour and Women's Heterogeneity Catherine Hakim The British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 47, No. 1. (Mar., 1996), pp. 178-188. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0007-1315%28199603%2947%3A1%3C178%3ATSDOLA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-1 This article references the following linked citations. If you are trying to access articles from an off-campus location, you may be required to first logon via your library web site to access JSTOR. Please visit your library's website or contact a librarian to learn about options for remote access to JSTOR. Bibliography Grateful Slaves and Self-Made Women: Fact and Fantasy in Women's Work Orientations Catherine Hakim European Sociological Review, Vol. 7, No. 2. (Sep., 1991), pp. 101-121. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0266-7215%28199109%297%3A2%3C101%3AGSASWF%3E2.0.CO%3B2-F Explaining Trends in Occupational Segregation: The Measurement, Causes, and Consequences of the Sexual Division of Labour Catherine Hakim European Sociological Review, Vol. 8, No. 2. (Sep., 1992), pp. 127-152. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0266-7215%28199209%298%3A2%3C127%3AETIOST%3E2.0.CO%3B2-3 Five Feminist Myths about Women's Employment Catherine Hakim The British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 46, No. 3. (Sep., 1995), pp. 429-455. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0007-1315%28199509%2946%3A3%3C429%3AFFMAWE%3E2.0.CO%3B2-M http://www.jstor.org LINKED CITATIONS - Page 1 of 2 - Labour Mobility and Employment Stability: Rhetoric and Reality on the Sex Differential in Labour-Market Behaviour Catherine Hakim European Sociological Review, Vol. 12, No. 1. (May, 1996), pp. 1-31. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0266-7215%28199605%2912%3A1%3C1%3ALMAESR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-D http://www.jstor.org LINKED CITATIONS - Page 2 of 2 -