BIBLIOGRAPHY
Lazere, Donald, ed. (1987). American
media and mass culture: Left per-
spectives.Berkeley: University of
California Press.
Leal, David L., and Frederick Hess.
(1999). Survey bias on the front
porch: Are all subjects interviewed
equally? American Politics Quar-
terly,27: 468–487.
Lee, Alfred McClung. (1978). Sociology
for whom?New York: Oxford Uni-
versity Press.
Lee, Harper. (1960). To kill a mocking-
bird.New York: Warner Books.
Lee, Jennifer, and Frank Bean. (2007).
Reinventing the color line: Immigra-
tion and America’s new racial/ethnic
divide. Social Forces,86(2):561–586.
Lee-Treweek, Geraldine, and Stephanie
Linkogle, eds. (2000). Danger in the
field.New York: Routledge.
Leggett, Glenn, C. David Mean, and
William Charvat. (1965). Prentice-
Hall handbook for writers,4th ed.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Leiter, Kenneth. (1980). A primer on eth-
nomethodology.New York: Oxford
University Press.
LeMasters, E. E. (1975). Blue collar aris-
tocrats.Madison: University of Wis-
consin Press.
Lemert, Charles. (1979). Science, reli-
gion and secularization. Sociological
Quarterly,20:445–461.
Lemert, Charles, ed. (1981). French so-
ciology: Rupture and renewal since
1968.New York: Columbia Univer-
sity Press.
Lenoir, Timothy. (1997). Instituting
science: The cultural production of
scientific disciplines. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press.
Lenzer, Gertrud, ed. (1975). Auguste
Comte and positivism: Essential
writings.New York: Harper & Row.
Lester, Marilyn, and Stuart C. Hadden.
(1980). Ethnomethodology and
grounded theory methodology: An in-
tegration of perspective and method.
Urban Life,9:3–33.
Levine, Joel H. (1993). Exceptions are the
rule: An inquiry into methods in the so-
cial sciences.Boulder, CO: Westview.
Lewis, George H., and Jonathan F. Lewis.
(1980). The dog in the night-time:
Negative evidence in social research.
British Journal of Sociology,31:
544–558.
Lieberson, Stanley. (1985). Making it
count: The improvement of social re-
search and theory.Berkeley: Univer-
sity of California Press.
Lieberson, Stanley. (1991). Small N’s
and big conclusions: An examination
of the reasoning of comparative stud-
ies based on a small number of cases.
Social Forces,70:307–320.
Lieberson, Stanley, Susan Dumais, and
Shyon Baumann. (2000). The insta-
bility of androgynous names: The
symbolic maintenance of gender
boundaries. American Journal of So-
ciology,105:1249–1287.
Liebetrau, Albert M. (1983). Measures of
association.Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Liebman, Robert, John R. Sutton, and
Robert Wuthnow. (1988). Exploring
social sources of denominationalism:
Schisms in American Protestant de-
nominations, 1890–1980. American
Sociological Review,53:343–352.
Liebow, Elliot. (1967). Talley’s corner.
Boston: Little, Brown.
Lifton, Robert J. (1986). Nazi doctors.
New York: Basic Books.
Light, Richard J., and David B. Pillemer.
(1984). Summing up: The science of
reviewing research.Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Likert, Rensis. (1970). A technique for
the measurement of attitudes. In
Attitude measurement,edited by
G. Summers, pp. 149–158. Chicago:
Rand McNally.
Lindblom, Charles E., and David K.
Cohen. (1979). Usable knowledge:
Social science and social problem
solving.New Haven, CT: Yale Uni-
versity Press.
Lindzey, Gardner, and Donn Byrne.
(1968). Measurement of social choice
and interpersonal attractiveness. In The
handbook of social psychology,Vol. 2:
Research methods, edited by G.
Lindzey and E. Aronson,pp. 452–525.
Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Link, Michael W., Michael P. Battaglia,
Martin R. Frankel, Larry Osborn, and
Ali H. Mokdad. (2007). Reaching the
U.S. cell phone generation: Compar-
ison of cell phone survey results
with an ongoing landline telephone
survey. Public Opinion Quarterly,
71(5):814–839.
Link, Michael W., Michael Battaglia,
Martin Frankel, Larry Osborn,
and Ali Mokdad. (2008). A compar-
ison of address-based sampling
(ABS) versus random-digit dialing
(RDD) for general population sur-
veys. Public Opinion Quarterly,
72(1):6–27.
Link, Michael W., and Robert Oldendick.
(1999). Call screening: Is it really a
problem for survey research? Public
Opinion Quarterly,63:577–589.
Linton C. (2004). The development of
social network analysis: A study in
the sociology of science. Vancouver:
Empirical Press.
Lipset, Seymour Martin. (1968). History
and sociology: Some methodological
considerations. In Sociology and his-
tory: Methods,edited by S. M. Lipset
and R. Hofstadter, pp. 20–58. New
York: Basic Books.
Little, Daniel. (1991). Varieties of social
explanation: An introduction to the
philosophy of science.Boulder, CO:
Westview.
Lloyd, Christopher. (1986). Explanation
in social history.New York: Basil
Blackwell.
Locke, Lawrence F., Warren Wyrick
Spirduso, and Stephen J. Silverman.
(1987). Proposals that work: A guide
for planning dissertations and grant
proposals,2nd ed. Beverly Hills, CA:
Sage.
Loeb, Susanna, Margaret Bridges, Daphna
Bassok, Bruce Fuller, and Russell
Rumberger. (2007). How much is too
much? The influence of preschool cen-
ters on children’s social and cognitive
development. Economics of Education
Review26(1):52–66.
Lofland, John. (1974). Styles of report-
ing qualitative field research.
American Sociologist,9:101–111.
Lofland, John, and Lyn H. Lofland.
(1984). Analyzing social settings,
2nd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Lofland, John, and Lyn H. Lofland.
(1995). Analyzing social settings,
3rd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Lofland, John, David Snow, Leon An-
derson, and Lyn H. Lofland. (2006).
Analyzing social settings,4th edition.
Belmont CA: Wadsworth.
Lofland, Lyn H. (1972). Self manage-
ment in public settings: Parts I and II.
Urban Life,1:93–108, 217–231.
Loftus, Elizabeth, Mark Klinger, Kyle
Smith, and Judith Fiedler. (1990).
A tale of two questions: Benefit of
asking more than one question. Public
Opinion Quarterly,54:330–345.
Loftus, Elizabeth, Kyle D. Smith, Mark
R. Klinger, and Judith Fiedler.
(1992). Memory and mismemory of
health events. In Questions about
questions: Inquiries into the cogni-
tive bases of surveys,edited by
J. Turner, pp. 102–137. New York:
Russell Sage Foundation.