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Stuart C. Dodd

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stuart Carter Dodd (1900-1975) was an American sociologist and an educator, who published research on the Middle East and on mathematical sociology, and was a pioneer in scientific polling.[1]

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Biography

Stuart C. Dodd was born in 1900 in Talas, Ottoman Empire.[2] His father was a medical missionary there. He graduated from Princeton University in 1926 with a degree in psychology. He began his career as professor of Sociology and Director of the Social Science Research Section of the American University of Beirut. During World War II, Dodd directed opinion survey work for the Allied Expeditionary Forces in Sicily and the Near East.[3]

After the war in 1947, Dodd was appointed Professor of Sociology at the University of Washington and director of the newly created Public Opinion Laboratory, the precursor for the Institute For Sociological Research at the University of Washington, where he remained until 1961. End 1950s he was among the first members of the Society for General Systems Research. He further served on the board of the Forum Foundations, which conducted futures research in the field of Administrative Theory and Many-to-Many Communication technology.

He was a Fellow of the National Research Council and the Rockefeller Foundation.

Work

Dodd was a leading expert on typical statistical polling as head of the Washington State Public Opinion Laboratory at the University of Washington in the 1960s. He was the only pollster to accurately predict, that U.S. President Harry S. Truman would defeat Governor Thomas E. Dewey and was called to testify before Congress as to how that all happened.

Bogardus Scale

In 1954 Dodd and Nehnevasja became known for their introduction of precise metric distances into the Bogardus scale.[4] According to Ethington, "revising some of the Bogardus response items and converting each to a power of 10 meters, they captured an almost convincing, common-sense physical distance for each item. Dodd and Nehnevasja had no intention of restoring geometric distance to any kind of constitutive role in the social process. Their sole objective, in fact, was to find an even more objective, trans-spatial metric".[5]

Publications

He authored several textbooks for the university's curriculum, most notably

  • 1931, Social Relationships in the Near East
  • 1934, A Controlled Experiment on Rural Hygiene in Syria
  • 1936, The Standard Error of a 'Social Force
  • 1942, Dimensions of Society: A Quantitative Systematics For the Social Sciences[6][7]
  • 1943, A Pioneer Radio Poll in Lebanon, Syria and Palestine
  • 1947, Systematic Social Science: A Dimensional Sociology
Articles

References

  1. ^ * Otto N. Larsen (1976). "In Memoriam: Stuart Carter Dodd, 1900-1975". In: The Public Opinion Quarterly, Vol. 40, No. 3 (Autumn, 1976), pp. 411-412.
  2. ^ http://www.stuartcdoddinstitute.org/docs/Stuart%20C%20Dodd.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Stuart C. Dodd (1946). "Towards World Surveying". In: Public Opinion Quarterly, volume 10, page 470.
  4. ^ Stuart C. Dodd and Jiri Nehnevajsa (1954). "Physical Dimensions of Social Distance". In: Sociology and Social Research Vol 38 (May–June 1954): pp. 287-292.
  5. ^ Philip J. Ethington, "The Intellectual Construction of "Social Distance": Toward a Recovery of Georg Simmel’s Social Geometry". Retrieved 16 June 2008.
  6. ^ Alonzo Church (1942). "Review: Stuart Carter Dodd, Dimensions of Society. A Quantitative Systematics for the Social Sciences". In: Journal of Symbolic Logic. Volume 7, Issue 3 (1942), 128-129.
  7. ^ Shanas, Ethel (1942). "A Critique of Dodd's Dimensions of Society". American Journal of Sociology. 48 (2): 214–230. ISSN 0002-9602.

External links

This page was last edited on 27 May 2024, at 16:59
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