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  1. Roger V. Gould Yale University. This article offers a formal theoretical model of the emergence of hierarchy that bridges the division between individualistic and struc-turalist accounts of inequality. In the model, actors reproduce status hierarchies by adjusting their own status-conferring gestures ac-cording to collective attributions.

  2. Gould (1989) has shown that brokerage between rival factions in community elites contributes to influence, while brokerage between elite members who are not political rivals does not.

  3. Roger V. Gould considers this intriguing question in Collision of Wills. He argues that human conflict is more likely to occur in symmetrical relationships—among friends or social equals—than in hierarchical ones, wherein the difference of social rank between the two individuals is already established.

  4. Roger V. Gould's article offers a formal model for the evolution of status hierarchies. Essentially, the model suggests that individuals actors will reproduce status believes by basing their own believes on collective attributions.

  5. Roger V. Gould, an influential sociologist who sought explanations for social upheavals large and small in the subtle texture of interpersonal relationships, died on Monday at Memorial...

  6. Roger V. Gould. In this important contribution both to the study of social protest and to French social history, Roger Gould breaks with previous accounts that portray the Paris Commune of 1871 as a continuation of the class struggles of the 1848 Revolution.

  7. Roger V. Gould, 1966–2002 As we were assembling this issue of the journal, we were deeply saddened to hear that Roger V. Gould had died in New York City on April 29, 2002. From 1997 to 2000, Roger served as editor of this journal. His extraordinary success as editor witnesses to the maturity of his scholarship