
6. Words as Moral Badges. A Continuous Flow of Buzzwords in
... in international aid and those used in social work. Some of them abound in social science and in radical politics of recognition and identity. Although their prominent place in development discourse is undeniable, the assumption that such words flourish more in the international aid business than in ...
... in international aid and those used in social work. Some of them abound in social science and in radical politics of recognition and identity. Although their prominent place in development discourse is undeniable, the assumption that such words flourish more in the international aid business than in ...
Economics and Happiness Research: Insights
... remained constant.6 Why, researchers wonder, has the overall level of satisfaction with life remained constant while standards of living have improved on almost all margins? One explanation, related to the Easterlin paradox is grounded in the way people view or frame their position in society. Indee ...
... remained constant.6 Why, researchers wonder, has the overall level of satisfaction with life remained constant while standards of living have improved on almost all margins? One explanation, related to the Easterlin paradox is grounded in the way people view or frame their position in society. Indee ...
- International Migration Institute
... Critical realism is an increasingly influential approach in the social sciences and although its initial impact has been restricted to theoretical debates, more interest is now being shown in the empirical application of critical realism. One rival perspective to critical realism in the social scien ...
... Critical realism is an increasingly influential approach in the social sciences and although its initial impact has been restricted to theoretical debates, more interest is now being shown in the empirical application of critical realism. One rival perspective to critical realism in the social scien ...
1 1 Sraffa`s Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities
... written, in a classical-Keynesian perspective this time, not in a neoclassical-Walrasian view, ...
... written, in a classical-Keynesian perspective this time, not in a neoclassical-Walrasian view, ...
wp 51.indd - Technology Governance
... futile, and impossible. By doing so, one need not openly oppose reform and development – it is enough if one creates a system within which dealing with the real problems is delegitimized. The late 19th century political attitude towards the Social Question, “Kathedersozialismus”, by and large led th ...
... futile, and impossible. By doing so, one need not openly oppose reform and development – it is enough if one creates a system within which dealing with the real problems is delegitimized. The late 19th century political attitude towards the Social Question, “Kathedersozialismus”, by and large led th ...
The Units of Culture
... For her, cultures were the chance assemblages of culture elements (or traits) that came together through diffusion. These elements are then modified to form a relatively consistent pattern of thought and behavior. The work of both Kroeber and Benedict was heavily influenced by the thought of the ma ...
... For her, cultures were the chance assemblages of culture elements (or traits) that came together through diffusion. These elements are then modified to form a relatively consistent pattern of thought and behavior. The work of both Kroeber and Benedict was heavily influenced by the thought of the ma ...
Reciprocity, Self-interest, and the Welfare State Christina M. Fong
... she would not like to work. There were no disincentive costs in this experiment, so some other interpretation is necessary. This experimental result also addresses a third concern that economists have raised: people who do not want to give to the poor may say that the poor are lazy to justify their ...
... she would not like to work. There were no disincentive costs in this experiment, so some other interpretation is necessary. This experimental result also addresses a third concern that economists have raised: people who do not want to give to the poor may say that the poor are lazy to justify their ...
Creating Ties That Bind - University of Virginia Darden School of
... viewpoint, largely, of analytical ethics. Philosophical business ethics is grounded in the normative ethical analysis of the relevance of principles, consequences, or character, with management scholars attending to the related descriptive and predictive investigations of actual organizational behav ...
... viewpoint, largely, of analytical ethics. Philosophical business ethics is grounded in the normative ethical analysis of the relevance of principles, consequences, or character, with management scholars attending to the related descriptive and predictive investigations of actual organizational behav ...
Building Social Work Knowledge: Some Issues
... The point to be kept in mind is that while having theoretical base is inevitable, there should be discreetness in selecting theories for use. The choice has to depend on the client's needs and situations and not on the worker's own categories or theories concerning the meanings of acts. This is beca ...
... The point to be kept in mind is that while having theoretical base is inevitable, there should be discreetness in selecting theories for use. The choice has to depend on the client's needs and situations and not on the worker's own categories or theories concerning the meanings of acts. This is beca ...
28974 - World bank documents
... chosen psychological insights that I think are helpful in understanding a few phenomena in development economics: parents’ schooling decisions, savings, financial institutions, bureaucratic corruption, and property rights. For each of these I describe a small piece of the psychology that may be pote ...
... chosen psychological insights that I think are helpful in understanding a few phenomena in development economics: parents’ schooling decisions, savings, financial institutions, bureaucratic corruption, and property rights. For each of these I describe a small piece of the psychology that may be pote ...
RTF version - Graduate School of Education
... decisions, all function as agents. The point is that they do so from a habitus, i.e. within a sense of reality or a sense of limits, which for the most part is not experienced as “constraint”; and that these limits are socially located and reproduced, not least (though not only) by their own actions ...
... decisions, all function as agents. The point is that they do so from a habitus, i.e. within a sense of reality or a sense of limits, which for the most part is not experienced as “constraint”; and that these limits are socially located and reproduced, not least (though not only) by their own actions ...
Article - Universidad Complutense de Madrid
... loosely defined normative1 concept and, as such, is used with differing meanings in accordance with rather ambiguous definitions. A clear definition of what constitutes its essence seems to be lacking in most documents on the subject, while a review of the most important of these documents reveals, ...
... loosely defined normative1 concept and, as such, is used with differing meanings in accordance with rather ambiguous definitions. A clear definition of what constitutes its essence seems to be lacking in most documents on the subject, while a review of the most important of these documents reveals, ...