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Order By Accident Book

Order By Accident
Order By Accident, While the consequences of low social order are well understood, the consequences of high social order are not. Yet perhaps nowhere in the world is social order so well developed as in Japan, which is highly organized, economically successful, and enjoys a, Order By Accident has a rating of 5 stars
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Order By Accident, While the consequences of low social order are well understood, the consequences of high social order are not. Yet perhaps nowhere in the world is social order so well developed as in Japan, which is highly organized, economically successful, and enjoys a, Order By Accident
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  • Order By Accident
  • Written by author Alan Miller
  • Published by Westview Press, July 2001
  • While the consequences of low social order are well understood, the consequences of high social order are not. Yet perhaps nowhere in the world is social order so well developed as in Japan, which is highly organized, economically successful, and enjoys a
  • This book explains the emergence of social order in Japan as an unintended consequence of institutionalized group conformity, and then traces out how that conformity affects a wide range of social characteristics from religious behavior to crime rates.
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Authors

Acknowledgments
Part One: Theoretical Orientation
Social Order and Social Control: An Introduction
The Solidaristic Theory of Social Order
Part Two: Social Institutions
The Education System: Social Initiation
Work: A Continuation
The Family
Crime
Part 3: Nonintuitive Consequences
Crime Revisited: White-Collar Crimes
The Religious Landscape of Japan
Trust
Part 4: Speculations and Conclusions
The Emergence of Cooperative Social Institutions
Conclusion

Author Biography: Alan S. Miller is professor of behavioral science at Hokkaido University, Japan and is an affiliate associate professor of sociology at the University of Washington. He has worked for the Environmental Sciences wing of the Science Applications International Corporation. Miller holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Washington. He is the author of over 20 articles in peer-reviewed academic journals concerned with the areas of crime and deviant behavior, religion, and comparative social psychology. Satoshi Kanazawa is assistant professor of sociology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He has written widely in the areas of social psychology, political sociology, marriage and the family, criminology, macrosociology, mathematical sociology, theory, and methodology. His recent articles have appeared in American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Journal of Politics, Sociological Theory, and Evolution and Human Behavior.


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