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Journals

Sociological Methods & Research

Sampling in Video-Based Social Sciences

Nicolas M. Legewie, Anne Nassauer, Simon KĂźhne

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Large-N, inference-based approaches are gaining increasing prominence in video-based social science research across sociology, social psychology, political science, and other fields. However, existing methodological publications on video methods do not discuss sampling methodology and empirical video-based research often includes only cursory discussions of the issue. To address this gap, this article applies insights from sampling methodology to video-based social science research. We review how sampling has been addressed in video-based social science research, reflect on its specific challenges, and propose a decision-tree flowchart to help researchers identify appropriate sampling strategies and common pitfalls. We then illustrate how the flowchart can be used in three common video-based sampling scenarios. The article thereby contributes to establishing clear guidelines for sampling in video-based social research as a reference point and as a resource for current and future practitioners, as well as reviewers and readers of such studies.

American Journal of Sociology

A Relational Approach to the Study of Gender Attitudes: Unobserved Heterogeneity and the Importance of Group Processes

Katharine Khanna

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Population and Development Review

Weaponizing Kinship: A Demographic Analysis of Bereavement in the Colombian Conflict

Enrique Acosta, Diego Alburez‐Gutierrez, Maria Gargiulo, Catalina Torres

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The ongoing Colombian armed conflict has produced widespread homicides and enforced disappearances, as armed actors used violence to terrorize communities and consolidate power. Family bereavement—one of the most pervasive and enduring consequences of this violence—remains critically understudied from a quantitative perspective. We quantify the population burden of bereavement—ever having lost a family member to conflict—using kinship demographic models applied to 1985–2018 data compiled by the Truth Commission and the Special Jurisdiction for Peace, corrected for under‐registration. By 2018, an estimated 7.5% of Colombians had lost a close relative and about 40% had lost at least one family member to conflict. Even assuming an over‐optimistic scenario with no post‐2018 violence, demographic projections indicate that conflict‐related bereavement will remain visible well into the 2080s. Results are robust to subnational heterogeneity and alternative “bereavement memory” specifications. Reading these estimates alongside the Commission's qualitative record underscores bereavement as a strategic mechanism of repression aimed at fracturing kin networks and community cohesion rather than a collateral by‐product. Our demographic profiling of the bereaved informs population‐health and psychosocial responses, including support for relatives of the disappeared, and can guide reparations and community‐based programs that rebuild kin and neighborhood ties while strengthening guarantees of non‐repetition.

Sociological Science

Is College Really “the” Equalizer? New Evidence Addressing Unobserved Selection

Haowen Zheng, Robert Andersen, Anders Holm, Kristian Karlson

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The Effect of the Texas Migrant Busing Program on the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election

William Scarborough, Ronald Kwon, David Brady

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Demography

The Cumulative Exposure to Exclusionary Zoning in Impoverished Neighborhoods

Matthew Mleczko

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In this study, I carry out dynamic modeling strategies to estimate the cumulative associations between exclusionary zoning and material hardship in impoverished neighborhoods. To do so, I create the largest nationwide panel zoning database to date by combining the National Zoning and Land Use Database covering the years 2019‒2022 with prior zoning and land use data from 2003‒2006. Accounting for posttreatment bias—the bias generated by including time-varying confounders that are themselves affected by past treatments in a longitudinal model—with marginal structural models, I demonstrate that exclusionary zoning is strongly associated with neighborhood disadvantage in impoverished neighborhoods, much more than would be uncovered using fixed effects or other modeling approaches. Exclusionary zoning is associated with higher median rents and higher shares of rent-burdened households in impoverished communities. Higher rents may be generated by higher housing prices as well as by a shortage of housing available to below-median income households throughout a metro area. These results suggest that exclusionary zoning policies may not only contribute to concentrated advantage in affluent areas but also have spillover effects that have negative long-run consequences for disadvantaged neighboring communities.

Fertility Outcomes of Adult Children With Divorced Parents: Evidence From Population Data

Silvia Palmaccio, Deni Mazrekaj, Kristof De Witte

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Each year, a substantial proportion of children experience the divorce of their parents. Despite numerous studies examining the consequences of parental divorce across various aspects of children's well-being in childhood, evidence of their family prospects in adulthood is scarce. Using administrative data from the Netherlands that spans three generations, we provide the first evidence based on population data of completed fertility and childlessness of children whose parents divorced. Our results suggest that adult children from divorced families have lower completed fertility and more frequently remain childless than adult children from continuously married families. Our findings support the hypothesis that adult children from divorced families exit marital or cohabiting relationships earlier than adult children from continuously married families, and the shorter duration of these unions contributes to explaining their lower likelihood of having first-order or higher order births. These results are robust to treatment effect bounds, using parental death as a source of parental loss, and cousin fixed effects.

Social Forces

Organizational accountability and gender segregation: can bureaucratic reforms drive organizational change?

Kevin Stainback

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Gender segregation is a core indicator of organizational inequality with downstream implications for wages, authority, and career mobility. Its causes and consequences have been studied extensively, yet much less is known about the organizational practices that may reduce it. This study addresses this gap by examining the effects of accountability practices on workplace gender integration. Scholars have identified three key aspects of organizational accountability: setting diversity goals, assigning responsibility, and monitoring and reviewing personnel decisions. These practices are widely believed to be effective; however, surprisingly little empirical research has examined which practices work to reduce inequality. Previous studies have primarily focused on assigning responsibility to a staff position or department (e.g., human resource or diversity manager), with few examining diversity goals or monitoring and reviewing practices. Analyzing a nationally representative panel dataset of British workplaces (2004–2011), this study finds that implementing diversity goals, assigning oversight to a human resource professional, and monitoring and reviewing personnel decisions significantly reduce gender segregation. These effects remain robust across models controlling for other practices theorized to reduce gender segregation, women’s managerial representation, and changes in employment during the Great Recession. These findings underscore how accountability-based bureaucratic reforms can advance workplace integration.

Correction to: Deporting children: case outcomes for unaccompanied minors facing removal proceedings in US immigration court

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European Sociological Review

Correction to: Beyond absolute education: relative educational attainment and perceived discrimination among immigrants

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War beyond borders: how military conflict in Ukraine shapes refugees’ settlement intentions abroad

Yuliya Kosyakova, Andreas Ette, Silvia Schwanhäuser

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This study investigates whether military conflict intensities in refugees’ home regions continue to shape their lives after arrival in a safe haven. While war and local conflict are well-established drivers of initial displacement, it remains unclear whether ongoing conflict influences settlement decision once refugees have escaped the immediate threat. We address this question using longitudinal data from the IAB-BiB/FReDA-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Ukrainian refugees in Germany, linked to high-frequency conflict data from Ukraine following the 2022 Russian invasion. Our findings show that both short- and long-term conflict intensities significantly affect refugees’ intentions to settle permanently abroad, with short-term shocks exerting a markedly stronger influence. Emotional responses to acute violence appear to disrupt more deliberative planning, consistent with ecological models of refugee distress. In contrast, long-term conflict intensity effects are weaker and diminish with time spent in the host country, suggesting processes of adaptation or habituation. We also find important heterogeneity: male refugees and those migrating for economic or family reasons are particularly sensitive to conflict dynamics, whereas those with family left behind are generally less inclined to settle permanently. Contrary to expectations, prior war exposure does not moderate current settlement intentions, pointing to possible acclimatization or avoidance strategies among highly exposed individuals. Overall, our results highlight the importance of integrating both emotional and evaluative processes into sociological models of refugee decision-making. They also highlight how even after arrival in safety, evolving home-country violence continues to shape refugees’ settlement trajectories.