MA in Global Political Economy
... our ‘world’ is made up), epistemology (the assumptions about the origins of ideas and knowledge and the possibility of understanding the world), and methodology (by which criteria are findings ordered and assessed). Of course the subject matter of the particular text is what allows us to make statem ...
... our ‘world’ is made up), epistemology (the assumptions about the origins of ideas and knowledge and the possibility of understanding the world), and methodology (by which criteria are findings ordered and assessed). Of course the subject matter of the particular text is what allows us to make statem ...
38th E-Seminar of the EASA Media Anthropology Network
... for material culture and Escobar more generally. Budka is also right in that this is not the route I have taken in my own studies, since I have preferred to take an approach from within anthropology that of material culture studies, which I think has developed its reputation partly because of a quit ...
... for material culture and Escobar more generally. Budka is also right in that this is not the route I have taken in my own studies, since I have preferred to take an approach from within anthropology that of material culture studies, which I think has developed its reputation partly because of a quit ...
Final Exam Review
... Why are and what kinds of institutions so important for democratization in developing states, why does this mean that democratization in developing states is difficult? Why is sovereignty a challenge for developing states, how do some governments use sovereignty? Why was development in South Korea, ...
... Why are and what kinds of institutions so important for democratization in developing states, why does this mean that democratization in developing states is difficult? Why is sovereignty a challenge for developing states, how do some governments use sovereignty? Why was development in South Korea, ...
Prices and Work in The New Economy
... technologically incapable. Rather, it is because the prevailing economic systems provide some, but not all, people with the means to be highly productive, in the sense of producing much that is valued in the world’s markets; while others can barely produce enough for their own needs, or work at jobs ...
... technologically incapable. Rather, it is because the prevailing economic systems provide some, but not all, people with the means to be highly productive, in the sense of producing much that is valued in the world’s markets; while others can barely produce enough for their own needs, or work at jobs ...
Social exclusion and rural development
... productivity. As a consequence, it will have the capability to take out and pay back loans. Peasant households will become recipients of credit. But, under current conditions, these households can not obtain credit via the credit market. And due to this limitation they can not increase their product ...
... productivity. As a consequence, it will have the capability to take out and pay back loans. Peasant households will become recipients of credit. But, under current conditions, these households can not obtain credit via the credit market. And due to this limitation they can not increase their product ...
Psychology and National Development
... These basic needs are taken to be the foundations of expanding capabilities. At a deeper level, however, the new emphasis on "human develop ment" assumes that Western conceptions of health, education, nutrition, and so on, are universally valid. This is a huge assumption which must not go unchallen ...
... These basic needs are taken to be the foundations of expanding capabilities. At a deeper level, however, the new emphasis on "human develop ment" assumes that Western conceptions of health, education, nutrition, and so on, are universally valid. This is a huge assumption which must not go unchallen ...
Interview - EconStor
... for them. Such desires – of course – have always been vital for religious believers, too. The second parallel between capitalism and religion lies in the fact that both represent forms of human universality – a point made already by George Herbert Mead. Like disembedded markets, the big religions co ...
... for them. Such desires – of course – have always been vital for religious believers, too. The second parallel between capitalism and religion lies in the fact that both represent forms of human universality – a point made already by George Herbert Mead. Like disembedded markets, the big religions co ...
B A IS Co nce ntration in E thn icity, N atio nalism , and M igratio n
... demographic dimensions of international studies, examining the economic, social, and political causes and effects of population flows and the development of ethnic identities and movements around the world. Students will draw on a wide range of disciplinary perspectives to become familiar with the s ...
... demographic dimensions of international studies, examining the economic, social, and political causes and effects of population flows and the development of ethnic identities and movements around the world. Students will draw on a wide range of disciplinary perspectives to become familiar with the s ...
FINAL REPORT GROUP A - Socrates Intensive Programme in
... Talking about children’s well – being it is necessary to consider some factors. One of them is social capital, which is defined by Putnam as: ‘Social capital refers to connections among individuals – social network and the norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness that arise from them.’(Putnam 2000: ...
... Talking about children’s well – being it is necessary to consider some factors. One of them is social capital, which is defined by Putnam as: ‘Social capital refers to connections among individuals – social network and the norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness that arise from them.’(Putnam 2000: ...