Construction, Concentration, and (Dis)Continuities in Social Valuations

I review and integrate recent sociological research that makes progress on three interrelated questions pertaining to social valuation: (a) the degree of social construction relative to objective constraints; (b) the degree of concentration in social valuations at a single point in time; and (c) the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zuckerman Sivan, Ezra W. (Contributor)
Other Authors: Sloan School of Management (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Annual Reviews, 2013-01-30T14:42:55Z.
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Summary:I review and integrate recent sociological research that makes progress on three interrelated questions pertaining to social valuation: (a) the degree of social construction relative to objective constraints; (b) the degree of concentration in social valuations at a single point in time; and (c) the conditions that govern two broad forms of temporal discontinuity-(i) fashion cycles, especially in cultural expression and in managerial practices, and (ii) bubble/crash dynamics, as witnessed in such domains as authoritarian regimes and financial markets. In the course of the review, I argue for the importance of identifying how objective conditions constrain social construction and suggest two contrarian mechanisms by which this is accomplished-valuation opportunism and valuation entrepreneurship-and the conditions under which they are more or less effective.