Gender as Social Institution

Zotero / D&S Group / Top-Level Items 2025-02-19

Item Type Journal Article Author Patricia Yancey Martin URL https://www.jstor.org/stable/3598436 Volume 82 Issue 4 Pages 1249-1273 Publication Social Forces ISSN 0037-7732 Date 2004 Extra Publisher: Oxford University Press Accessed 2025-02-19 04:37:37 Library Catalog JSTOR Abstract This article encourages sociologists to study gender as a social institution. Noting that scholars apply the institution concept to highly disparate phenomena, it reviews the history of the concept in twentieth-century sociology. The defining characteristic most commonly attributed to social institution is endurance (or persistence over time) while contemporary uses highlight practices, conflict, identity, power, and change. I identify twelve criteria for deciding whether any phenomenon is a social institution. I conclude that treating gender as an institution will improve gender scholarship and social theory generally, increase awareness of gender's profound sociality, offer a means of linking diverse theoretical and empirical work, and make gender's invisible dynamics and complex intersections with other institutions more apparent and subject to critical analysis and change.