ABSTRACT

Moving beyond his 1989 book, Control: Sociology's Central Notion, Jack Gibbs develops in this new book a comprehensive theory of control in all its biological, technological, and human dimensions. His treatment goes beyond conventional ideas about social control to show why self-control and proximate control are essential to understanding human interaction. He also argues that thinking of control in terms of the counteraction of deviance is insufficient. Tests of Gibbs's control theory, based on data from sixty-six countries, add credence to his claim that control could be the central notion for sociology and perhaps for other social sciences.

part One|63 pages

Preliminary Considerations

chapter 1|24 pages

Claims and Disclaimers

chapter 2|37 pages

Control, Types of Control, and Power

part Two|123 pages

The Intrinsic Part of the Theory

chapter 5|39 pages

The Remaining Premises

chapter 6|15 pages

Recapitulation and Derivation of Theorems

part Three|41 pages

The Theory's Extrinsic Part and One Series of Tests

chapter 7|17 pages

The Theory's Extrinsic Part

chapter 8|21 pages

A Series of Tests

part Four|48 pages

Final Considerations

chapter 9|20 pages

Future Work on the Theory

chapter 10|26 pages

The Notion of Control Reconsidered