The Taken-For-Granted Reference: An Empirical Examination
- 1 September 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology
- Vol. 7 (3) , 361-376
- https://doi.org/10.1177/003803857300700303
Abstract
A common phenomenon in sociology (and in other disciplines presumably) is that of the `taken-for-granted reference'. This is typically an original empirical study, the findings of which become accepted and thereafter acknowledged as valid evidence in support of argument or for the generation of new hypotheses or counter hypotheses without presentation of critical re-evaluation. The extent to which this occurs and how and why it does occur are largely uninvestigated. In this paper, one case of the taken-for-granted reference, which is widely used in studies of social mobility, is subjected to critical re-evaluation in the light of original empirical research.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Mobility in Industrial SocietyPublished by University of California Press ,1959
- The Recruiting of the Employing Classes from the Ranks of the Wage-Earners in the Cotton IndustryJournal of the Royal Statistical Society, 1912