Volume 30 (2024)
Volume 29 (2023)
Volume 28 (2021)
Volume 27 (2020)
Volume 25 (2018)
Volume 24 (2017)
Volume 23 (2016)
Volume 22 (2015)
Volume 21 (2015)
Volume 20 (2013)
Volume 19 (2012)
Volume 18 (2011)
Volume 17 (2010)
Volume 16 (2009)
Volume 15 (2008)
Volume 14 (2007)
Volume 13 (2006)
Volume 12 (2005)
Volume 11 (2004)
Volume 10 (2003)
Volume 9 (2002)
Volume 8 (2001)
Volume 7 (2001)
Volume 6 (1998)
Volume 5 (1997)
Volume 4 (1996)
Volume 3 (1995)
Volume 2 (1993)
Volume 1 (1992)
A Comparative Study of the Relationship between the Development of Economics of Culture and Order in Society

Davood Parchami; Fatemeh Derakhshan

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 1-40

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2020.44814.2132

Abstract
  Iran is facing a problem of underdevelopment with regards to the Economics of Culture (EC) and is far from developing, developed, and even similar countries in this regard. EC develops with maintained order on the components of the economic, cultural, social and political subsystems and their relations ...  Read More

Memory and Religion in Iran; Transformations and Perspectives

Mohammad Rasouli; Nematollah Fazeli

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 41-77

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2020.41186.2094

Abstract
  In the present paper, the transformations in Iranians’ memory (with an emphasis on their religiosity) is explained and the role of power relations is analyzed. For this purpose, three types of memory technologies (oral, literacy (print) and digital (electronic)) and their impacts on the formation ...  Read More

Proposing an Institutionalist Conceptual Framework for the Study of Development Issues in Countries with Dependence on Natural Resources

Farshad Momeni; Ismail Aalizad; Vahid Mirebeigi

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 79-121

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2019.35209.1918

Abstract
  For years researchers have associated the developmental problems of countries possessing natural resources like oil with the very fact of the possession of such resources. The numerous studies of this field have mostly focused on the theories of the Rentier State and the Resource Curse. Today, with the ...  Read More

A Sociological Explanation of the Phenomenon of Soccer Hooliganism Case Study: Soccer Spectators of Tehran

Ehsan Rahmani Khalili; Syed Milad Safavian

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 123-156

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2020.43661.2116

Abstract
  Hooliganism, which can be construed as the violence of soccer fans, is a much serious and current phenomenon that brings about adverse effects in society. Therefore, the main questions of the present research are as follows: what factors affect hooliganism among soccer spectators and how? to what extent? ...  Read More

Urban Slums and the Experience of Social Suffering (Case Study: Nayssar in Sanandaj)

Jamal Mohammadi; Saeb Adak

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 157-184

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2019.39701.2046

Abstract
  The main goal of this article is to explicate the experience of social suffering in urban slums through a dialectic structure of social, historical, and spatial aspects of the construct of people living in urban slums. The study of slums requires a theoretical framework which emphasizes on the social ...  Read More

Functions, Forms, and Meanings of Women’s Cheerful Performances during the Qajar Era

Asal Asri Maleki; Mahmoud Azizi; Kazem Shahbazi

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 186-219

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2019.38777.2016

Abstract
  The current paper analyzes the sociology of three fashions of women’s cheerful performances during the Qajar Dynasty. The genres or fashions include critical and traditional performances, socio-critical performances (lustful men), and social performances (lack of economic security). Two or three ...  Read More

The Construction of the National Subject with the Mediation of Education in Iran (First Pahlavi Period)

Maryam Mokhtari; Farshid Rahimi; Jalil Karimi; Kamal Khaleghpanah

Volume 26, Issue 86 , December 2019, Pages 221-253

https://doi.org/10.22054/qjss.2019.45090.2137

Abstract
  There are three major paradigms in relation to the origin of nations; primordialism, modernism and ethic symbolism. It seems that the modernist paradigm considers the nation as a construct and the result of the bureaucratic processes of the state, and in line with this, Anderson`s ideas on the role of ...  Read More