50 YEARS BACKWARD AND FORWARD? ADDRESS BY: THE
... competitiveness, macro-economic stability also had to be established. This stability, in the dictum of the IMF, had to be anchored by leveraging the exchange rate, adjusting it regularly to sustain competitiveness with other markets. The problem was, however, that each adjustment of the exchange rat ...
... competitiveness, macro-economic stability also had to be established. This stability, in the dictum of the IMF, had to be anchored by leveraging the exchange rate, adjusting it regularly to sustain competitiveness with other markets. The problem was, however, that each adjustment of the exchange rat ...
From Cyber to Digital Anthropology to an Anthropology of the
... understand sociotechnological processes and phenomena, for instance practices of internet utilization. Pfaffenberger (1988: 243) urges anthropology to concentrate on human social behaviour “in which people engage when they create or use a technology”. The anthropology of cyberculture has been follow ...
... understand sociotechnological processes and phenomena, for instance practices of internet utilization. Pfaffenberger (1988: 243) urges anthropology to concentrate on human social behaviour “in which people engage when they create or use a technology”. The anthropology of cyberculture has been follow ...
lecture notes on “why do we study classical social theory
... Why are Marx, Weber and Durkheim considered to be classics? Why were their works canonized and not others? Why do we still read them? A work is called a classic if it is still read long after it was written. Canon: approved corpus of works deemed to be important. Canon formation is part of the socia ...
... Why are Marx, Weber and Durkheim considered to be classics? Why were their works canonized and not others? Why do we still read them? A work is called a classic if it is still read long after it was written. Canon: approved corpus of works deemed to be important. Canon formation is part of the socia ...
Political Geography Wrap UP
... Mackinder’s Heartland theory. Spyman stated that Eurasia’s rimland, the coastal areas, is the key to controlling the World Island. Explanation - The rimland contains the Heartland. Whoever would control the rimland, would eventually control the World Island. Whoever would control the World Island ...
... Mackinder’s Heartland theory. Spyman stated that Eurasia’s rimland, the coastal areas, is the key to controlling the World Island. Explanation - The rimland contains the Heartland. Whoever would control the rimland, would eventually control the World Island. Whoever would control the World Island ...
Sociological Perspectives
... majority e.g. wealth is good, murder is bad. They wish to keep the statusquo. Individuals and groups have to accept their roles in society. 2) Society is made up of integrated parts that are tied together, thus if something is wrong with one it will effect the others. (It functions like the organs o ...
... majority e.g. wealth is good, murder is bad. They wish to keep the statusquo. Individuals and groups have to accept their roles in society. 2) Society is made up of integrated parts that are tied together, thus if something is wrong with one it will effect the others. (It functions like the organs o ...
pdf - Vassar College
... Collapse ensues when the center is no longer able to secure resources from the periphery, usually having lost the legitimacy through which it could distribute goods and services of traditionally organized groups. This chapter contains a detailed analysis of the collapse of Mesopotamian civilization ...
... Collapse ensues when the center is no longer able to secure resources from the periphery, usually having lost the legitimacy through which it could distribute goods and services of traditionally organized groups. This chapter contains a detailed analysis of the collapse of Mesopotamian civilization ...
ABSTRACT - Isaac Chidaura MA Research Report
... and a subsequent effect on the same footing is that, more often than not, prevention intervention practitioners seem to concentrate on effects of social contentious issues whilst overlooking the root causes. This analysis is situated against the predominant use of Theatre for Development to open out ...
... and a subsequent effect on the same footing is that, more often than not, prevention intervention practitioners seem to concentrate on effects of social contentious issues whilst overlooking the root causes. This analysis is situated against the predominant use of Theatre for Development to open out ...
Conclusion: Implications of a Cultural Lens for Public Policy and
... Development is more difficult and, necessarily, more participatory. However, it also implies that participation alone is no panacea, precisely because of the social inequities inherent within group-based relations (Abraham and Platteau this volume, Cooke and Kothari 2001, Mansuri and Rao, 2003). Thi ...
... Development is more difficult and, necessarily, more participatory. However, it also implies that participation alone is no panacea, precisely because of the social inequities inherent within group-based relations (Abraham and Platteau this volume, Cooke and Kothari 2001, Mansuri and Rao, 2003). Thi ...
Prezentace aplikace PowerPoint
... preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign industry, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention. By pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society more effectu ...
... preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign industry, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention. By pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society more effectu ...
IPE Lectures.key
... economic realm. The existence of a market, or the kind of market is entirely dependent on the political environment ...
... economic realm. The existence of a market, or the kind of market is entirely dependent on the political environment ...
Chapter 15 Vocabulary
... Urban ecology – the sociological approach to the study of cities. Concentric Zone model – a sociological model that describes a city as spreading from outward from the center, creating rings or zones around it. Sector Model – a sociological model that describes a city a spreading out in wedges rathe ...
... Urban ecology – the sociological approach to the study of cities. Concentric Zone model – a sociological model that describes a city as spreading from outward from the center, creating rings or zones around it. Sector Model – a sociological model that describes a city a spreading out in wedges rathe ...
economic constitution
... “The problem will not solve itself simply by our letting economic systems grow up spontaneously. The history of the century has shown this plainly enough. The economic system has to be consciously shaped. The detailed problems of economic policy, trade policy, credit, monopoly, or tax policy, or of ...
... “The problem will not solve itself simply by our letting economic systems grow up spontaneously. The history of the century has shown this plainly enough. The economic system has to be consciously shaped. The detailed problems of economic policy, trade policy, credit, monopoly, or tax policy, or of ...