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- W2549278390 abstract "For the last decade or so, the sociology of the professions has been in a moribund condition. Was it dead or merely resting, or was it perhaps even showing vital signs of a postrevisionist, postmodern kind? Certainly during this time, there were no shortage of authors moved to comment on its condition, and a number of prominent figures rallied to what was identified as the need for paradigm evolution (Dingwall 1983, p. 12) and concep tual and/or reassessment (Burrage 1990, p. 20). While the need for a revitalized study of the professions is evident, it is clear from writings during the 1980s that the agenda being written for the future involves more of a strategic than a shift. The argu ment is that the way forward lies in historical and comparative research (Burrage 1990; Collins 1990b; Dingwall 1983). It is maintained that a rec ognition of the contingency and nonlinear character of historical develop ments, with variable outcomes across and within societies, will allow the conceptual inadequacies of past approaches to be overcome. Nonetheless, within these discussions, there are areas of conceptual continuity which exert considerable constraint on the possibility of real progress. While we think there is value in the current reassessment, much of it has the feel of old wine in new bottles; the change consists primarily in the requirement that the bottles be clearly marked with the date and location of production. We make this judgment with a general interest in the relationship be tween gender and employment, and with a particular interest in the develop ment of the professions and women's access to them. For some time now, the point has been made that the relationship of the professions and profes sionalization to gender processes and divisions is underresearched and un dertheorized. This situation has been contrasted to that of the relationship of the professions and professionalization to class processes and divisions" @default.
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- W2549278390 date "1994-12-01" @default.
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- W2549278390 title "Gender, the Professions, and Employment Citizenship" @default.
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- W2549278390 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/15579336.1994.11770095" @default.
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