Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1393, USA.
AJS. 2011 Jan;116(4):1234-83. doi: 10.1086/659100.
Using 2006 General Social Survey data, the authors compare levels of segregation by race and along other dimensions of potential social cleavage in the contemporary United States. Americans are not as isolated as the most extreme recent estimates suggest. However, hopes that "bridging" social capital is more common in broader acquaintanceship networks than in core networks are not supported. Instead, the entire acquaintanceship network is perceived by Americans to be about as segregated as the much smaller network of close ties. People do not always know the religiosity, political ideology, family behaviors, or socioeconomic status of their acquaintances, but perceived social divisions on these dimensions are high, sometimes rivaling racial segregation in acquaintanceship networks. The major challenge to social integration today comes from the tendency of many Americans to isolate themselves from others who differ on race, political ideology, level of religiosity, and other salient aspects of social identity.
利用 2006 年的综合社会调查数据,作者比较了当代美国按种族和其他潜在社会分裂维度划分的隔离程度。美国人并不像最近最极端的估计那样孤立。然而,人们希望“桥接”社会资本在更广泛的熟人网络中比在核心网络中更为常见的希望并没有得到支持。相反,美国人认为整个熟人网络与更小的亲密关系网络一样隔离。人们并不总是了解熟人的宗教信仰、政治意识形态、家庭行为或社会经济地位,但这些方面的感知社会分裂程度很高,有时在熟人网络中与种族隔离程度相当。当今社会融合面临的主要挑战来自于许多美国人与在种族、政治意识形态、宗教信仰程度和其他突出社会身份方面存在差异的人隔离的倾向。