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  1. Aug 15, 2024 · In this book, Merton outlined his well-known strain theory of deviance. Robert Merton took a standard functionalist view that there was a value consensus: that - through socialisation - we all share the same norms and values and life goals.

  2. Robert K. Merton was an American sociologist whose diverse interests included the sociology of science and the professions, sociological theory, and mass communication. After receiving a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1936, Merton joined the school’s faculty.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Early Life and Education
    • Career and Later Life
    • Major Publications

    Robert K. Merton was born Meyer R. Schkolnick in Philadelphia into a working class Eastern European Jewish Immigrant family. He changed his name at the age of 14 to Robert Merton, which evolved out of a teenage career as an amateur magician as he blended the names of famous magicians. Merton attended Temple College for undergraduate work and Harvar...

    Merton taught at Harvard until 1938 when he became professor and chairman of the Department of Sociology at Tulane University. In 1941 he joined the Columbia University faculty where he was named to the University's highest academic rank, University Professor, in 1974. In 1979 Merton retired from the University and became an adjunct faculty member ...

    Social Theory and Social Structure (1949)
    The Sociology of Science (1973)
    Sociological Ambivalence (1976)
    On The Shoulders of Giants: A Shandean Postscript (1985)
    • Ashley Crossman
  3. Robert King Merton (born Meyer Robert Schkolnick; July 4, 1910 – February 23, 2003) was an American sociologist who is considered a founding father of modern sociology, and a major contributor to the subfield of criminology.

  4. Jul 6, 2010 · Summary. Of all contemporary theorists of social structure, Merton has had the greatest impact on empirical research. Investigators find it easy to understand how Merton's general ideas about social structure imply hypotheses about the pattern of behavior and the pattern of associations between variables in the setting in which their research ...

    • Arthur L. Stinchcombe
    • 2017
  5. War I, and kept out of unions, thousands of Negroes could not resist strikebound employers who held a door invitingly open upon a world of jobs from which they were otherwise excluded. History creates its own test of the theory of self-fulfilling prophecies. That Negroes were strikebreakers because they were excluded from

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  7. Middle-range theory, developed by Robert K. Merton, is an approach to sociological theorizing aimed at integrating theory and empirical research. It is currently the de facto dominant approach to sociological theory construction, [1] especially in the United States.

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