Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Ver...
View graph of relations

System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Versus Counterfactual Thinking.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Versus Counterfactual Thinking. / Sayer, A.
In: Sociology, Vol. 34, No. 4, 11.2000, p. 707-725.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Sayer A. System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Versus Counterfactual Thinking. Sociology. 2000 Nov;34(4):707-725. doi: 10.1177/S0038038500000432

Author

Bibtex

@article{98c38604360748138693f98e7182a74d,
title = "System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Versus Counterfactual Thinking.",
abstract = "The paper raises some problems caused by `associational thinking' in social science by reference to examples from the literature on economic organisation and gender. Associational thinking focuses on common associations between social phenomena, such as the gendering of organisations, without asking counterfactual questions about the status of these relationships, for example, whether organisations are unavoidably gendered or only contingently so. It is argued these questions have been inadequately resolved in the literature, as a consequence of a reluctance to engage in counterfactual reasoning and abstraction, and a neglect of the extent to which systems - as opposed to the lifeworld - are `identity-blind'. These questions are pursued through discussions of whether markets and bureaucracies are inherently gendered. It is argued further that associational thinking has also clouded the normative judgements implicit in the critiques of gendered organisations.",
keywords = "abstraction • associations • lifeworld • system",
author = "A. Sayer",
year = "2000",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1177/S0038038500000432",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "707--725",
journal = "Sociology",
issn = "1469-8684",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - System, Lifeworld and Gender: Associational Versus Counterfactual Thinking.

AU - Sayer, A.

PY - 2000/11

Y1 - 2000/11

N2 - The paper raises some problems caused by `associational thinking' in social science by reference to examples from the literature on economic organisation and gender. Associational thinking focuses on common associations between social phenomena, such as the gendering of organisations, without asking counterfactual questions about the status of these relationships, for example, whether organisations are unavoidably gendered or only contingently so. It is argued these questions have been inadequately resolved in the literature, as a consequence of a reluctance to engage in counterfactual reasoning and abstraction, and a neglect of the extent to which systems - as opposed to the lifeworld - are `identity-blind'. These questions are pursued through discussions of whether markets and bureaucracies are inherently gendered. It is argued further that associational thinking has also clouded the normative judgements implicit in the critiques of gendered organisations.

AB - The paper raises some problems caused by `associational thinking' in social science by reference to examples from the literature on economic organisation and gender. Associational thinking focuses on common associations between social phenomena, such as the gendering of organisations, without asking counterfactual questions about the status of these relationships, for example, whether organisations are unavoidably gendered or only contingently so. It is argued these questions have been inadequately resolved in the literature, as a consequence of a reluctance to engage in counterfactual reasoning and abstraction, and a neglect of the extent to which systems - as opposed to the lifeworld - are `identity-blind'. These questions are pursued through discussions of whether markets and bureaucracies are inherently gendered. It is argued further that associational thinking has also clouded the normative judgements implicit in the critiques of gendered organisations.

KW - abstraction • associations • lifeworld • system

U2 - 10.1177/S0038038500000432

DO - 10.1177/S0038038500000432

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 707

EP - 725

JO - Sociology

JF - Sociology

SN - 1469-8684

IS - 4

ER -