Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Hagerstown and Schizophrenia
- 2 Social Stratification and Parent–Child Relations in Washington, DC
- 3 The Torino Study
- 4 Men Employed in Civilian Occupations in the United States
- 5 The Transformation of the Occupations Study into a Longitudinal Analysis
- 6 Life on Sabbatical Leave in Norway and at the National Institute of Mental Health
- 7 Class, Stratification, and Personality
- 8 Poland under Communism
- 9 Occupational Self-Direction and Distress in Poland
- 10 The Vietnam War, Nixon, and Me
- 11 Japan
- 12 Germany – West and East
- 13 Poland and Ukraine in Transition to Capitalism and Democracy
- 14 The Presidency of the American Sociological Association, Ronald Reagan, and My Job Switch
- 15 My Two Exploratory Expeditions to China
- 16 China in Transition to a Modern Economy
- 17 Retirement, and My Last Sabbatical, at Deep Springs Junior College
- 18 The Theory I Propose
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Hagerstown and Schizophrenia
- 2 Social Stratification and Parent–Child Relations in Washington, DC
- 3 The Torino Study
- 4 Men Employed in Civilian Occupations in the United States
- 5 The Transformation of the Occupations Study into a Longitudinal Analysis
- 6 Life on Sabbatical Leave in Norway and at the National Institute of Mental Health
- 7 Class, Stratification, and Personality
- 8 Poland under Communism
- 9 Occupational Self-Direction and Distress in Poland
- 10 The Vietnam War, Nixon, and Me
- 11 Japan
- 12 Germany – West and East
- 13 Poland and Ukraine in Transition to Capitalism and Democracy
- 14 The Presidency of the American Sociological Association, Ronald Reagan, and My Job Switch
- 15 My Two Exploratory Expeditions to China
- 16 China in Transition to a Modern Economy
- 17 Retirement, and My Last Sabbatical, at Deep Springs Junior College
- 18 The Theory I Propose
- Index
Summary
For much of the time that we were working on the US–Polish comparative study, my collaborators and I were also working on a comparative study of Japan and the United States. It came about this way. A noted Japanese sociologist, Ken'ichi Tominaga, had decided that he would develop such a comparative study of Japan and the United States. He secured the funds to do so from Japanese sources, drew up preliminary plans, and arranged to travel to the United States to meet potential US collaborators. I was one of the Americans to whom he wrote. I gladly responded that my collaborators and I would welcome him and his colleagues.
Tominaga brought along two colleagues, one of whom, Atsushi Naoi, was to be the actual investigator. Tominaga wanted only to be the advisor to the study. The survey was to be geographically limited, to the Kanto plane, a fairly large area that included Tokyo. We would have preferred a national study, but we were willing to settle for this more limited geographic area, which was all that they could afford. In any case, the idea of being able to add a democratic Asian society to our comparison of a capitalist society and a socialist one was immensely appealing. We could take into account not only the formal organization of society but also an East–West dimension to the cultural differences already under consideration.
A considerable potential problem, which we fully recognized from our early challenges in Torino, was that the Japanese had no National Opinion Research Center, like NORC in Chicago, nor any institution, such as the Polish Academy of Sciences, staffed with experienced survey researchers, to actually carry out the surveys. Naoi was to carry out the study himself. He already had experience conducting first-rate surveys, though, so with some misgivings, we decided that we would gamble on his competence. The study was to be owned by the Japanese, but so were the US and Polish studies formally owned by their own people; the crucial factor was that we would cooperate in the analyses.
Here I had to admit, that although I was certainly prepared to participate in the analyses, the amount of time that I could devote to the study was limited by my commitment to the Polish study, my administrative duties as a lab chief, and my growing involvement in political activities.
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- Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2019