@article{holden_2000, title={America's shame: Women and children in shelter and the degradation of family roles}, volume={29}, ISSN={["0094-3061"]}, DOI={10.2307/2655240}, abstractNote={Preface Descent to Shelter: Systemic Factors Leading to Shelter How a Diverse Population Grew While Housing Decreased Family Values and Other Myths and Realities about Families The Social Psychological Experience of Poverty and Shelter Life Shelter Life and Women's Self-Concept Shelter Life and Its Effects of Children's Development Solutions: Some Old, Some New A Solution for Shrinking Funds: Mandated Community Collaboration Consciousness Raising: An Old Solution with a New Twist Recommendations Epilogue: Connecting Private Troubles with Public Issues: A Little Sociological Imagination Would Help Bibliography Index}, number={5}, journal={CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY-A JOURNAL OF REVIEWS}, author={Holden, D}, year={2000}, month={Sep}, pages={717–718} } @article{schwalbe_godwin_holden_schrock_thompson_wolkomir_2000, title={Generic processes in the reproduction of inequality: An interactionist analysis}, volume={79}, ISSN={["0037-7732"]}, DOI={10.2307/2675505}, abstractNote={The study of inequality has been largely defined as the study of its measurable extent, degree, and consequences. It is no less important, however, to understand the interactive processes through which inequalities are created and reproduced in concrete settings. The qualitative research that bears on understanding these processes has not yet been consolidated, and thus its theoretical value remains unrealized. In this article we inductively derive from the literature a sensitizing theory of the generic processes through which inequality is reproduced. The major processes that we identify are othering, subordinate adaptation, boundary maintenance, and emotion management. We argue that conceiving the reproduction of inequality in terms of these generic processes can resolve theoretical problems concerning the connection between local action and extralocal inequalities, and concerning the nature of inequality itself.}, number={2}, journal={SOCIAL FORCES}, author={Schwalbe, M and Godwin, S and Holden, D and Schrock, D and Thompson, S and Wolkomir, M}, year={2000}, month={Dec}, pages={419–452} } @article{holden_moore_holliday_1998, title={Health education for a breast and cervical cancer screening program: using the ecological model to assess local initiatives}, volume={13}, ISSN={["0268-1153"]}, DOI={10.1093/her/13.2.293}, abstractNote={This study investigates the development and implementation of health education strategies at the local level for a statewide breast and cervical cancer control program. Baseline data on these initiatives were collected from 88 local screening programs in North Carolina. Using the ecological model as a framework, health education initiatives were assessed and analyzed to determine the level of activity occurring at the local level and the comprehensiveness of programs. Types and levels of interventions used are described and initial analysis is provided of the impact these strategies are having on recruiting women from target populations into these screening programs. Specific examples illustrating the variety of interventions used at the individual, network, organizational and community levels, and the impact of certain variables, such as the use of local health education staff, on the comprehensiveness of interventions utilized, are provided. The importance to practitioners of establishing process indicators in assessing local initiatives and challenges to conducting evaluations of these strategies are also discussed.}, number={2}, journal={HEALTH EDUCATION RESEARCH}, author={Holden, DJ and Moore, KS and Holliday, JL}, year={1998}, month={Jun}, pages={293–299} } @misc{holden_1998, title={Social perspectives on emotion, vol. 4}, volume={27}, number={6}, journal={Contemporary Sociology}, author={Holden, D.}, year={1998}, pages={605–606} } @article{holden_1997, title={''On equal ground'' - Sustaining virtue among volunteers in a homeless shelter}, volume={26}, ISSN={["1552-5414"]}, DOI={10.1177/089124197026002001}, abstractNote={ How can volunteers affirm virtue through volunteering when working conditions make it hard for them to feel good about the help they are giving? A participant-observation study of well-intentioned volunteers in a homeless shelter—who found themselves cast as rule enforcers—shows how people can maintain a positive moral identity under conditions that threaten it. The volunteers used the status differences between themselves and shelter “guests” as resources for fashioning the moral identity “egalitarian.” Volunteers did this by acting like friends to guests, distancing themselves from pejorative cultural images of volunteers, and taking pride in discretionary rule enforcement. When compelled to enforce infantilizing rules, some volunteers sought to protect their identities as egalitarians by altercasting guests as children in need of rules—and thus not deserving of equal treatment. The analysis shows how identity work can both draw on and reproduce inequality. }, number={2}, journal={JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY ETHNOGRAPHY}, author={Holden, D}, year={1997}, month={Jul}, pages={117–145} }