I checked 9 sociology journals on Sunday, April 19, 2026 using the Crossref API. For the period April 12 to April 18, I found 16 new paper(s) in 6 journal(s).

American Journal of Sociology

Skill Diversification Beyond High-Paying Jobs
Siqi Han, Siwei Cheng
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Reach and Retrenchment of the Environmental State: Global Climate Politics in the Amazon Rainforest
Livio Silva-Muller
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Annual Review of Sociology

Sending Money Home: Understanding the Social Dynamics of Migrant Remittances
Hasan Mahmud, Min Zhou
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This article synthesizes major strands of scholarship on migrant remittances, addressing the central question of what motivates migrants to remit and how these motivations vary across social, temporal, and structural contexts. We review classical and neoclassical theories, the migration–development nexus, and the New Economics of Labor Migration, highlighting analytical limits in their economistic assumptions. We then examine sociological and transnational approaches that reconceptualize remittances as socially embedded practices shaped by gendered obligations, kinship norms, moral economies, sending-state regimes, and digital mediation. Building on this literature, we outline a multilevel sociological framework that situates remittance behavior at the intersections of microlevel familial subjectivities, mesolevel community expectations and transnational networks, and macrolevel political–economic structures. This framework underscores the recursive relationship between the causes and consequences of remitting, illustrating how remittances simultaneously sustain households, reshape social relations, and reproduce state and global dependencies, thereby challenging linear models prevalent in development discourse.
The Architecture of Global Capital: Elites, States, and the New Geography of Wealth
Kimberly Kay Hoang, Camille Biron-Boileau
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This article reviews the sociological and interdisciplinary literature on the global architecture of elite wealth, emphasizing structural transformations in the global political economy following the 2008 financial crisis. First, we review the literature on wealth stratification and its limits for studying the current structure of elite wealth. Second, we highlight the dimensions central to this new landscape and examine the reorganization of global production and capital flows, including the outsourcing of manufacturing and the rise of new economic centers in East and Southeast Asia, which challenge nation-bounded analyses of wealth. Third, we show how both democratic and authoritarian states strategically partner with private capital, blurring political distinctions and enabling elite consolidation. Fourth, we trace the expansion of offshore finance that fosters the rise of a transnational elite supported by professional intermediaries. We conclude by calling for new theoretical and methodological tools to study elite power, hidden capital flows, and their implications for inequality and governance.
Thinking Sex in Sociology: Sexualities Research in the Twenty-First Century
Kristen Schilt, D'Lane R. Compton, Khoa Phan
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In this article, we take stock of major developments in sociological approaches to the study of sexual life in the twenty-first century. First, we highlight the breadth of theoretical and methodological approaches within the sociology of sexualities subfield. We explore the growth of research that centers race, ethnicity, age, and geographic location within the study of sexualities. We also showcase the growing body of transnational research that critically examines the shifting forms of state power that constrain and enable the possibilities of sexual autonomy and collective action. Second, we examine the emerging subfield of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender)-inclusive demography, detailing the limitations and possibilities of this methodological approach and recent patterns in findings. Finally, we highlight how feminist and queer critiques have expanded the conceptual frameworks for studying sex beyond the procreative/nonprocreative binary that long pervaded the discipline. We end with ideas for how to safeguard the epistemological and methodological diversity of sexualities research in sociology.

Social Forces

The spatial logic of racial devaluation in the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation
Megan Evans
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While scholars highlight the racial legacy of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) residential security maps, less is known about how race shaped HOLC appraisers’ perceptions of the neighborhoods they assessed. Drawing on racialized organizations theory, this study examines how racial schemas within the housing industry became institutionalized in appraisal practices. Using the case of Chicago and a mixed-method approach, it interrogates the racialized discourse in HOLC neighborhood area descriptions, revealing how appraisers used a racialized geographic imagination that positioned Black residents as inherent threats to property values, even when they were not physically present in a neighborhood. Content analyses reveal appraisers’ acute spatial awareness of where racialized groups lived and their engagement in anticipatory devaluation. Regression analyses confirm that appraiser discussion of Black residents, rather than actual demographics, primarily shaped risk assessments, underscoring the interpretive role of appraisers as they transformed neighborhood demographics into racialized valuations. This study shows how race structured the institutional habits of thought on which places held value in the city. Findings have broader implications for residential segregation, stigma, and institutional racism, as the racial-spatial ideology around neighborhood value would shape and legitimize decades of racially unjust norms in the US housing market.

Social Networks

Introduction to the Network Scale-up Method
Christopher McCarty, H. Russell Bernard
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Social Science Research

Childhood exposure to local wealth inequality, economic isolation in schools, and inter-class social ties in adulthood
Manuel Schechtl
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Educational assortative mating and changing patterns of parental financial investment in children, 1990–2024
Hyo Joo Lee
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Gendered work and family trajectories: How do STEM graduates fare in the labor market?
Rosa Weber, Camilla Härtull, Jan Saarela
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Social and emotional skills and young people's expectations of social status and mobility
Francesca Borgonovi, Seong Won Han
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Social welfare expansion and political support during economic slowdown: A panel data analysis of China, 2010-2018
Xue Li, Bingdao Zheng
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Do social networks help or hurt? Accessed status and tie strength across occupational status and mental well-being
Lijun Song, Zhe Zhang, Philip J. Pettis, Meagan Rainock
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Beyond Black and White: Racial stereotyping and support for racial redress policies
Eric Silver, Kerby Goff, John Iceland
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Three decades of interethnic marriage in China: Ethnic boundaries, educational sorting, and status exchange
Yanwen Wang, Zheng Mu
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Socius

Power, Status, Legitimacy, and Shame in Organizations
Joseph Dippong, Stephanie Moller, Leah Ruppanner, Jill Yavorsky
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The power-status theory of emotions posits that emotions arise out of a process in which people compare the levels of status and power that they experience against some standard of status and power adequacy. Power-status theory is effective at predicting emotions, but it does not formally specify a structural mechanism that explains how actors determine what constitutes adequate or inadequate power and status. The authors argue that legitimacy, or the notion that actors have a right to expect compliance and deference, serves as this mechanism. Focusing on shame, the authors illustrate that perceived losses in legitimacy mediate a substantial portion of the links among status loss, power loss, and shame. The authors also find that legitimacy mediates the relationship between a person’s position within an organization and the shame they experience when their status and power are challenged. These findings advance power-status theory by providing a structural standard for status and power adequacy that explains how losses in status and power generate emotional outcomes.