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Featured researches published by Phillips Cutright.
American Sociological Review | 1963
Phillips Cutright
Large scale comparative studies of national political systems offer the social scientist a methodology of great analytic power if only proper use can be made of the material at hand. In this article we examine in some detail a single sociological effort to apply the comparative method to national political systems.
American Journal of Sociology | 1965
Phillips Cutright
A scale of national social security programs is developed and related to economic development, literacy, urbanization, and a political-representativeness index. The degree of social security coverage of a nations population is most powerfully correlated with its level of economic development, but when economic development is controlled for, the more representative governments introduce programs earlier than the less representative governments. A separate analysis of the relationship between changes in political representativeness and changes in social security legislation found that new social security programs were more likely to follow positive than negative political changes.
American Sociological Review | 1976
Phillips Cutright; Michael Hout; David R. Johnson
This paper 1) estimates the effects of colonial penetration extraction of wealth and 19th century immigration on Latin American modernization and Catholic Church strength at the beginning of the 20th century; 2) estimates the net effect of modernization and Catholic institutional strength (CIS) on crude birthrates and illegitimacy ratios in Lation America in 1910 1940 and 1970; and 3) compares general marital and illegitimate fertility rates in 1960. The objective is to investigate factors that accelerate or retard acceptance of the preconditions resulting in lower fertility. Several procedures were intended to remedy deficiencies of earlier studies: 1) the population was defined as a readily identifiable geographic and cultural group--all Latin American nations with Spanish heritage; 2) a structural equation model of fertility and illegitimacy was employed that incorporated independent effects of modernization and CIS; 3) indicators of modernization were pooled into a unidimensional index; and 4) the relative effects of causal agents were compared for 1910 1940 and 1970. Path coefficients among predictor variables were estimated for 18 countries. Both migration and late colonial penetration took significant paths to 1910 modernization with migration the stronger variable. The 2 variables explained about 83% of the variation among nations in 1900 modernization. Extraction of wealth was the only variable significantly related to 1900 CIS. The partial correlates of modernization and CIS net of the set of preceding predictor variables were not significant for any period beginning in 1910. Path coefficients of structural modernization and CIS on crude birthrates for the 18 countries in 1910 1940 and 1970 suggest increasing and then stable large negative effects of modernization on fertility among Latin nations. The net effect of Church strength on crude birthrates is positive but not always significant. Church strength reduces consensual unions and thus lowers illegitimate fertility butthe negative effect on illegitimacy is counterbalanced by a positive effect on marital fertility rates. The net result is a small positive effect of Church strength on the total number of births.
American Journal of Sociology | 1958
Phillips Cutright; Peter H. Rossi
This study of primary elections in an industrial city attempts to account for the vote of various candidates in four Republican and four Democratic primaries by using several measures of campaing organization and the notoriety of the candidates. In the Democratic primaries between 92 per cent and 81 per cent of the variation in the candidate vote was accounted for, while between 79 per cent and 28 per cent of the variation in Republican primaries can be accounted for using the same variables.
American Sociological Review | 1969
Phillips Cutright; S. N. Eisenstadt
American Sociological Review | 1967
Phillips Cutright
American Sociological Review | 1958
Phillips Cutright; Peter H. Rossi
American Journal of Sociology | 1968
Phillips Cutright
American Sociological Review | 1974
Phillips Cutright
Public Administration Review | 1965
Aaron Wildavsky; Kenneth E. Boulding; Robert A. Dentler; Phillips Cutright; Robert van Dam; Peter W. Morrison; Herman Kahn; Anatol Rapoport; Thomas C. Schelling; Glenn H. Snyder