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地质科学的全球制度化,1800年至1990年

The Global Institutionalization of Geological Science, 1800 to 1990

American Sociological Review · 2003
被引 34
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

通过历史与定量分析,研究1800至1990年间地质学如何在全球范围内制度化,发现世界社会的联系比工业化、殖民等因素更重要,对理解科学扩散有参考价值。

Abstract

Historical and quantitative examination of one scientific field—geology—provides the basis for exploring how Western science became institutionalized worldwide during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Prior research emphasizes the importance of industrialization, Protestantism, and the legacy of colonial rule. An alternative perspective is offered here—one rooted in sociological neoinstitutionalism. Mechanisms are examined that linked non-Western colonies and nations to “world society,” serving as conduits for the diffusion of Western science. The relevant mechanisms have changed over time as world society has become more organized and structured. Direct ties among nations were important early on, but links to international organizations became important in the postwar era. Historical examples and a quantitative analysis of the spread of professional geological associations from 1800 to 1990 provide evidence in support of several theories. Results suggest that the institutionalization of geology was very much an international process. Societies strongly linked to world society institutionalized geological science rapidly, supporting neoinstitutional predictions. Finally, Protestantism had a positive effect on the institutionalization of geological science, while the effects of colonization and industrialism were mixed and fluctuated over time.

科学社会学世界历史地质学制度理论科学传播