I checked 9 sociology journals on Friday, June 12, 2026 using the Crossref API. For the period June 05 to June 11, I found 18 new paper(s) in 4 journal(s).

American Sociological Review

Unstable Work in a Fissured Economy: Tracking Employment in Subcontractor Establishments in France
Clem Aeppli
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Many jobs in the twenty-first century have become short-term, precarious, and unstable. To help explain this phenomenon, I consider the fragmentation of economic activity across networks of transacting organizations—a trend known to affect pay, but with unknown implications for the stability of work. I focus on a key part of this trend: the growing role of subcontracting. Combining research on the reasons for subcontracting with organizational theories of dependence and diversification, I argue that many subcontractor establishments face volatile demand and have few margins to cut costs other than labor. These factors compound to destabilize work for employees. Drawing on restricted-access French microdata, I show that employment at subcontractor establishments is substantially more unstable than elsewhere. I then trace this instability to key features of their organizational structure. Subcontractors employ a narrower range of occupations, are less profitable, and spend a greater share of their total expenses on labor than do non-subcontractors. Together, these attributes can account for almost two fifths of subcontractors’ excess employment instability. Finally, I show how subcontractor establishments are less able to insulate their employees from swings in demand. Following a drop in revenue, the employees of subcontractor establishments are more likely to exit than are those of non-subcontractor establishments. These findings demand a richer view of employment instability, entailing not only the demise of conventional employment practices—the focus of much recent research—but also the function and structure of organizations.
Temporal Misalignment and Unequal Agency: What Terminal Cancer Patients Teach Us about Time and Inequality
Zhuofan Li, Daniel Dohan, Corey M. Abramson
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This article examines how time both exacerbates and destabilizes existing inequality by stratifying agency. Drawing on five years of fieldwork in nine cancer clinics and 196 in-depth interviews with 96 patients navigating a terminal cancer diagnosis toward the end of life, we show the centrality of “temporal misalignment”—a mismatch between the temporalities enacted by individual actions and those imposed by institutional contexts structuring when and how action is possible. A combination of ethnographic data and multiple correspondence analysis (MCA) reveals how effective use of resources requires cancer patients to (1) triage conflicting demands of treatment, work, family, and bureaucratic schedules; (2) reconcile mismatched trajectories of disease progression and healthcare institutions; and (3) anchor uncertain decisions at present in an anticipatable future. These efforts to manage temporal misalignment not only reproduce resource disparities, but also create new, imminent, and often embodied constraints on agency that even the most advantaged patients find resource-draining and goal-displacing as the disease progresses. Reconceptualizing time as a ruptured relationship between agency and contexts offers important sociological insights into how resources, institutions, and culture operate and intertwine to shape inequality in healthcare and beyond.

Social Networks

Neighborhood shocks and network dynamics: An instrumental variable approach to measuring triadic closure in daily mobility networks
Karl Vachuska, Clayton Adamson
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Unequal relational gains in a sport intervention for asylum seekers: How sociodemographics and athletic skills shape network outcomes
Alejandro Ciordia, Cornelius Holler, Annabell SchĂĽĂźler, Miranda J. Lubbers, Cristiano Vezzoni
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Social Science Research

The intergenerational mobility advantage of educators’ children: Capital embedded in occupations
Clayton Adamson, Karl Vachuska
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Catalysts and buffers: How diversity and status in social networks shape attitudes towards inequality in contemporary societies
Gonzalo Franetovic
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Americans' views of religion in public life: The effect of three cultural models on attitudes toward religious and nonreligious groups
David Sikkink, Greg Wurm
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Horizontal stratification and educational homogamy in South Korea: Marriage patterns and preferences across elite- and non-elite university graduates
Sangsoo Lee, Hyunjoon Park, HJ Katelyn Kim
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Gender convergence of cannabis use, dependence, and risk in the U.S.
Mike Vuolo, Brian C. Kelly, Maria M. Orsini, Amanda Roxburgh
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Motherhood and access to top positions: The one percent glass-ceiling under Nordic family policies
Trond Petersen, Andrew Penner, Are Skeie Hermansen
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Socialite or sociable? Highbrow tastes, omnivorous inclinations, and perceptions of individuals’ status and qualities
Mads Meier Jæger, Rikke Haudrum Rasmussen
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Depressive symptom trajectories from adolescence to midlife among Latin Americans in the United States: Variation by generation and region of origin
Eda G. Christensen, Kim Korinek, Daniel E. Adkins
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Sociological Science

Changing Opportunity: Rising Local Wealth Inequality and Growing Class Gaps in Income Mobility
Manuel Schechtl, Florencia Torche
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Teacher Sorting and Inequalities in Student Achievement: Unequal Exposures and Differential Returns to Teacher Qualifications
Said Hassan
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Clickbait Crime News? Metrics and Professional Authority in Local Newsrooms
Jonathan Ben-Menachem
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Beyond Text: Using AI-Generated Visual Conjoints to Study Gender and Housework Attribution
Léa Pessin, Kevin Munger
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Declining Inequality and Persistent Inequality Structures
Soohyun Roh, Nathan Wilmers
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The Exception to Women’s Advantage: How Rurality, Red Counties, and the Local Economy Shape Gender Gaps in Educational Attainment
April Sutton, Bernardo Mackenna, Bolun Zhang, Amanda Bosky
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