Abstract
The sociology of gender and sex roles has been constructed at the intersection of 2 perennial debates: 1) Do sex differences exist, and if so, what are they? 2) Are gender contrasts primarily due to cultural and social influence or to innate psychological or physical disposition? There are no simple answers, but sociology makes its distinctive contribution by spelling out the issues and developing an appropriate research methodology. To measure sex differences, sociologists have made a major conceptual contribution by specifying the significant dimensions to be compared. Sociologists' distinctive focus, however, is on gender stratification - the conditions that promote social equality or inequality between the sexes. To explain sex inequality, sociologists turn to the surrounding and interacting systems that affect all human behavior - culture and macro- and microsocial structure. At every system level, sociological studies have formulated explanations of gender difference by examining the effects of variation in adjacent systems. Sociology has accurately reflected the complexities and ambiguities that are inherent in the study of gender difference. These debates make for a vital and growing field and deserve celebration as well as continued endeavor.