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How and Why Does History Matter for Development Policy?
How and Why Does History Matter for Development Policy?

... finely crafted as they are likely to be—are either ‘unactionable’ through prevailing policy instruments or may be used for purposes (whether by dictators or by well-meaning bureaucracies wielding only the crudest of de-contextualized policy tools11) that they find distasteful and/or for which they w ...
PowerPoints Chapter 12
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... structures and practices, that is, the promotion of a particular theory becomes a social actuality • View that, if theorists have well developed theories which question the objectivity of financial accounting, and if they are able to generate sufficient support for the theory then ultimately this co ...
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... The Knowledge Society: Innovation, Multimedia and the Postmodern City1 Innovation, digitisation, and knowledge society are terms that do not usually collocate with the humanities. Nor is it usual to find the humanities claiming a significant role in the knowledge society, which is typically perceive ...
scanning the marketing environment - McGraw
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... worldwide, making business software piracy easy because pirated copies of software can be distributed and downloaded quickly and globally. An estimated one in every three business software applications in use in the world is pirated. Piracy means lost jobs, wages, tax revenues, and a potential barri ...
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... Attempts to explain why people violate rules is not new, and what we now call criminology dates back to the middle of the eighteenth century. The pioneers in the area of theoretical criminology were trained in a variety of disciplines. Cesare Beccaria (1738–1794) and Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832) were ...
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... which they ultimately convey. In particular we specify the conditions under which small world -type social networks (observed in most real-life societies) can be socially optimal. We also address the micro–macro linkages, implicit in the model, by answering the question, how the aggregate variables ...
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The Communication of Meaning and the

... The communication of meaning as different from (Shannon-type) information is central to Luhmann’s social systems theory and Giddens’ structuration theory of action. These theories share an emphasis on reflexivity, but focus on meaning along a divide between inter-human communication and intentful ac ...
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Time and the Biological Consequences of Globalization

... emphasis away from the production process and toward the complex interaction of production, labor, and exchange in relationship to processes of circulation. When discussing capitalist circulation, Marx equivocates between the concept of “average time” and the recognition of variation in the speed of ...
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... accountable for her/his actions, simply because she/he has had the opportunity to decide whether or not to do what she/he does, while water has no choice. Responsibility for actions that we take out of a degree of free will has been the foundation of our understanding of morality. At least Immanuel ...
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... give an account of the different equilibria in terms of utility-maximizing responses to exogenous events. In contrast, the view of society through the Mengerian window provides images taken not from snapshots but from motion pictures. Human action and societal interaction involve duration, whereby ...
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... In a foundational paper, Meyer and Rowan (1977) set out a view of complex organizations in post-industrial society as reflecting wider myths in the institutional environment rather than the technical demands of production. In order to protect an organization’s technical core, they posited a great d ...
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- Opus: Online Publications Store
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... accountable for her/his actions, simply because she/he has had the opportunity to decide whether or not to do what she/he does, while water has no choice. Responsibility for actions that we take out of a degree of free will has been the foundation of our understanding of morality. At least Immanuel ...
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science, individualism, and attitudes toward deviance: the influence

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Cultural evolution and archaeology : Historical and cultural trends
Cultural evolution and archaeology : Historical and cultural trends

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History of the social sciences

The history of the social sciences has origin in the common stock of Western philosophy and shares various precursors, but began most intentionally in the early 19th century with the positivist philosophy of science. Since the mid-20th century, the term ""social science"" has come to refer more generally, not just to sociology, but to all those disciplines which analyse society and culture; from anthropology to linguistics to media studies.The idea that society may be studied in a standardized and objective manner, with scholarly rules and methodology, is comparatively recent. While there is evidence of early sociology in medieval Islam, and while philosophers such as Confucius had long since theorised on topics such as social roles, the scientific analysis of ""Man"" is peculiar to the intellectual break away from the Age of Enlightenment and toward the discourses of Modernity. Social sciences came forth from the moral philosophy of the time and was influenced by the Age of Revolutions, such as the Industrial revolution and the French revolution. The beginnings of the social sciences in the 18th century are reflected in the grand encyclopedia of Diderot, with articles from Rousseau and other pioneers. Around the start of the 20th century, Enlightenment philosophy was challenged in various quarters. After the use of classical theories since the end of the scientific revolution, various fields substituted mathematics studies for experimental studies and examining equations to build a theoretical structure. The development of social science subfields became very quantitative in methodology. Conversely, the interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary nature of scientific inquiry into human behavior and social and environmental factors affecting it made many of the natural sciences interested in some aspects of social science methodology. Examples of boundary blurring include emerging disciplines like social studies of medicine, sociobiology, neuropsychology, bioeconomics and the history and sociology of science. Increasingly, quantitative and qualitative methods are being integrated in the study of human action and its implications and consequences. In the first half of the 20th century, statistics became a free-standing discipline of applied mathematics. Statistical methods were used confidently.In the contemporary period, there continues to be little movement toward consensus on what methodology might have the power and refinement to connect a proposed ""grand theory"" with the various midrange theories that, with considerable success, continue to provide usable frameworks for massive, growing data banks. See consilience.
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