
Sociology /Social Work - BYU
... whereby individuals learn and internalize their attitudes, values, and behaviors to function as social beings and responsive participating members of society), ensures that the individual will develop an identity or self. ...
... whereby individuals learn and internalize their attitudes, values, and behaviors to function as social beings and responsive participating members of society), ensures that the individual will develop an identity or self. ...
View/Open - Dora.dmu.ac.uk
... recognition implied in the notion of mutuality yields some interesting tensions: recognition is a response from another person which makes meaningful the feelings, intentions, and actions of the self. It allows that self to realize its agency and authorship in a tangible way. But this recognition ca ...
... recognition implied in the notion of mutuality yields some interesting tensions: recognition is a response from another person which makes meaningful the feelings, intentions, and actions of the self. It allows that self to realize its agency and authorship in a tangible way. But this recognition ca ...
The Protestant Ethic
... inhibiting the reader from reading the whole book. In it, Kalberg has carried out three important tasks. First, he brings to the attention of the reader what the central research problem of Weber’s analysis is (pp. xiii-xvii). Kalberg notes that Weber is specifically interested in the relationship b ...
... inhibiting the reader from reading the whole book. In it, Kalberg has carried out three important tasks. First, he brings to the attention of the reader what the central research problem of Weber’s analysis is (pp. xiii-xvii). Kalberg notes that Weber is specifically interested in the relationship b ...
Wisdom: Object of Study or Basic Aim of Inquiry
... From the standpoint of achieving what is of value in life, it is what we do, or refrain from doing, that ultimately matters. Even where new knowledge and technological know-how are relevant to the achievement of what is of value – as it is in medicine or agriculture, for example – it is always what ...
... From the standpoint of achieving what is of value in life, it is what we do, or refrain from doing, that ultimately matters. Even where new knowledge and technological know-how are relevant to the achievement of what is of value – as it is in medicine or agriculture, for example – it is always what ...
Culture and Socialization
... penalty for inappropriate behaviour is getting an F on the same test because you did not study and answered only 5 of the 25 questions. These various forms of social control demonstrate the many informal and formal ways in which society responds to behaviours that are deemed to be unacceptable. Our ...
... penalty for inappropriate behaviour is getting an F on the same test because you did not study and answered only 5 of the 25 questions. These various forms of social control demonstrate the many informal and formal ways in which society responds to behaviours that are deemed to be unacceptable. Our ...
xxvii conferenza italiana di scienze regionali
... become the most influent in organisational science – related social capital studies in the last decade. The originality of such an approach lies in its cognitive approach, that is, the idea of defining the dimensions of social capital with regard to the nature of resources of which social capital en ...
... become the most influent in organisational science – related social capital studies in the last decade. The originality of such an approach lies in its cognitive approach, that is, the idea of defining the dimensions of social capital with regard to the nature of resources of which social capital en ...
The object turn changes register?
... demonstration of the air pump before the Royal Society as the most well known example, have used such cases to demonstrate that the invention of empirical science involved the invention of formats of publicity, revolving around the reporting of verifiable observations (Shapin and Shaffer, 1989). Foc ...
... demonstration of the air pump before the Royal Society as the most well known example, have used such cases to demonstrate that the invention of empirical science involved the invention of formats of publicity, revolving around the reporting of verifiable observations (Shapin and Shaffer, 1989). Foc ...
Gabriel Tarde and the End of the Social
... associate that represents and personifies the group in its entirety, or else a small number of associates (the ministers in a State) who, each under a particular aspect, individualise in themselves the group in its entirety. But this leader, or those leaders, are always also members of that group, b ...
... associate that represents and personifies the group in its entirety, or else a small number of associates (the ministers in a State) who, each under a particular aspect, individualise in themselves the group in its entirety. But this leader, or those leaders, are always also members of that group, b ...
Social Network Analysis
... • Many results from social network can be adapted and extended for use in the Web context. • Two types of social network analysis, – Centrality – Prestige closely related to hyperlink analysis and search on the Web ...
... • Many results from social network can be adapted and extended for use in the Web context. • Two types of social network analysis, – Centrality – Prestige closely related to hyperlink analysis and search on the Web ...
One-Dimensional Sport
... advanced industrial society in which a ‘mechanics of conformity’ systematically effaced critical thought and behaviour to produce a ‘society without opposition’. Marcuse claimed that the mass media, industrial management and uncritical modes of thought had created false needs that served to integrat ...
... advanced industrial society in which a ‘mechanics of conformity’ systematically effaced critical thought and behaviour to produce a ‘society without opposition’. Marcuse claimed that the mass media, industrial management and uncritical modes of thought had created false needs that served to integrat ...
Recent ASA Presidents and `Top` Journals: Observed Publication
... repeated quotation marks), and all other papers become ‘non-top’. Not dealt with separately is what might be seen as the journal middle classes, of longstanding and well-respected but not ‘top’ journals; this includes several of the US regional ones, the British Journal of Sociology, and the British ...
... repeated quotation marks), and all other papers become ‘non-top’. Not dealt with separately is what might be seen as the journal middle classes, of longstanding and well-respected but not ‘top’ journals; this includes several of the US regional ones, the British Journal of Sociology, and the British ...
Representations, identity and resistance in communication
... them with a code for social exchange and a code for naming and classifying unambiguously the various aspects of their world and their individual and group history” (Moscovici, 1973, p, xiii). From this widely cited definition, we see that representations “provide collectivities with intersubjectivel ...
... them with a code for social exchange and a code for naming and classifying unambiguously the various aspects of their world and their individual and group history” (Moscovici, 1973, p, xiii). From this widely cited definition, we see that representations “provide collectivities with intersubjectivel ...
Chapter 14: The Sociology of the Body Health, Illness, and Sexuality
... a. social factors more than physical or biological factors. b. the changing expectations about men’s and women’s roles. c. the spread of fast-food restaurants over the past forty years. d. increased globalization and contact among societies with ...
... a. social factors more than physical or biological factors. b. the changing expectations about men’s and women’s roles. c. the spread of fast-food restaurants over the past forty years. d. increased globalization and contact among societies with ...
Monetary Exchange as an Extra-Linguistic Social Communication
... monetary exchange as simply redistributing existing knowledge is to miss the crucial point that such a shift creates what previously did not exist in any accessible form. This links very nicely to Hayek's (1948) later work on the role prices play as conveyors of knowledge.' For Hayek, the importance ...
... monetary exchange as simply redistributing existing knowledge is to miss the crucial point that such a shift creates what previously did not exist in any accessible form. This links very nicely to Hayek's (1948) later work on the role prices play as conveyors of knowledge.' For Hayek, the importance ...
vi: intellectuals and their publics
... Conservatives, but also attract popular support to a true Labor Party (Mills supported Henry Wallace’s 1948 bid as Presidential Candidate of the Progressive Party) that would ...
... Conservatives, but also attract popular support to a true Labor Party (Mills supported Henry Wallace’s 1948 bid as Presidential Candidate of the Progressive Party) that would ...
The Status of Sociology as a Science: Problems
... argument is not without counter criticism. A closer examination reveals that neither does science possess the degree of objectivity which people imagine it does, nor does sociology lack completely an element of objectivity. Psychological research has proved that the manner in which we perceive the k ...
... argument is not without counter criticism. A closer examination reveals that neither does science possess the degree of objectivity which people imagine it does, nor does sociology lack completely an element of objectivity. Psychological research has proved that the manner in which we perceive the k ...
Mobility and territoriality in the making of societies
... attempt of following how social relations and societies are continuously redefined. It draws an image of societies as made up of various mobility systems as well as new forms of social obligations performed through these systems, often ensuring connections at a distance or that face-to-face meeting ...
... attempt of following how social relations and societies are continuously redefined. It draws an image of societies as made up of various mobility systems as well as new forms of social obligations performed through these systems, often ensuring connections at a distance or that face-to-face meeting ...
autism , through a social lens
... Because their goal is to teach children with autism to better understand social life and the world around them, clinicians who treat autism draw directly (if not always consciously) upon sociological ideas. In particular, treatments for autistic children employ George Herbert Mead’s insights about h ...
... Because their goal is to teach children with autism to better understand social life and the world around them, clinicians who treat autism draw directly (if not always consciously) upon sociological ideas. In particular, treatments for autistic children employ George Herbert Mead’s insights about h ...
Knowing your publics: the use of social media analytics in local
... produced. The workshop was attended by 13 representatives from several departments in our partner organizations, who were recommended to us by our key contacts through a snowballing sampling method. The aim of the workshop was both to demonstrate how social media analytics tools work and to create a ...
... produced. The workshop was attended by 13 representatives from several departments in our partner organizations, who were recommended to us by our key contacts through a snowballing sampling method. The aim of the workshop was both to demonstrate how social media analytics tools work and to create a ...
Theory European Journal of Political
... things) Harry Braverman’s research, retains a core of validity.12 And at this point Honneth also thinks that Marx’s expressivist anthropology, especially the role it assigns to ‘externalization’ and ‘objectification’ in the development of human capacities – indeed in the formation of the human perso ...
... things) Harry Braverman’s research, retains a core of validity.12 And at this point Honneth also thinks that Marx’s expressivist anthropology, especially the role it assigns to ‘externalization’ and ‘objectification’ in the development of human capacities – indeed in the formation of the human perso ...
The multi-trajectory theory of adult firesetting (M
... previously isolated theories or research findings?), fertility (i.e., does the theory provide novel hypotheses, research arenas, or clinical interventions?), and explanatory depth (i.e., does the theory detail intricate mechanisms when describing the intended phenomena?). These criteria, amongst oth ...
... previously isolated theories or research findings?), fertility (i.e., does the theory provide novel hypotheses, research arenas, or clinical interventions?), and explanatory depth (i.e., does the theory detail intricate mechanisms when describing the intended phenomena?). These criteria, amongst oth ...