Critical Realism in Information Systems Research
... duced a valuable description of principles for critical realist case study research. We have so far discussed the ontological commitments of CR, and we now move to a more epistemological argument: that social science is essentially similar to natural science in its realist character, albeit with mod ...
... duced a valuable description of principles for critical realist case study research. We have so far discussed the ontological commitments of CR, and we now move to a more epistemological argument: that social science is essentially similar to natural science in its realist character, albeit with mod ...
Networks
... strong, self-policing tribal groups that defend themselves by threatening to retaliate indiscriminately against the individual members of any aggressor group. It provides an incentive for groups to police their own members so as not to provoke retaliation. ...
... strong, self-policing tribal groups that defend themselves by threatening to retaliate indiscriminately against the individual members of any aggressor group. It provides an incentive for groups to police their own members so as not to provoke retaliation. ...
1. Basics of Pedagogics. Subject and tasks of Pedagogics
... Gehlen's anthropology does not stand alone. It exists within the context of a series of anthropologies, being preceded by the work of Scheler and Plessner, among others, which also had an effect on pedagogics, and followed by the work of Sartre, Levinas and Derrida, among others. Research into the f ...
... Gehlen's anthropology does not stand alone. It exists within the context of a series of anthropologies, being preceded by the work of Scheler and Plessner, among others, which also had an effect on pedagogics, and followed by the work of Sartre, Levinas and Derrida, among others. Research into the f ...
IfS DP 02_2013 Social Network Analysis and the Sociology of
... conceptual idea, goes back to Karl Polanyi, who became especially well-known through his book, The Great Transformation (2001), which elaborates on the genesis of a self-regulatory market in Europe, and particularly in England. Polanyi’s concept shows clear links to Durkheimian thought (Carroll and ...
... conceptual idea, goes back to Karl Polanyi, who became especially well-known through his book, The Great Transformation (2001), which elaborates on the genesis of a self-regulatory market in Europe, and particularly in England. Polanyi’s concept shows clear links to Durkheimian thought (Carroll and ...
Beyond the Third Way - European Consortium for Political Research
... compromise between left and right, in which the left moves closer to the right”(Giddens 2000: 11) and therefore fundamentally conservative. Fourth, academics and politicians in Continental Europe (Levy 1999 and Lightfoot 1999) argued that it was fundamentally an Anglo-Saxon project and “was of littl ...
... compromise between left and right, in which the left moves closer to the right”(Giddens 2000: 11) and therefore fundamentally conservative. Fourth, academics and politicians in Continental Europe (Levy 1999 and Lightfoot 1999) argued that it was fundamentally an Anglo-Saxon project and “was of littl ...
OAD313 Computer Applications in Business II: Introduction
... According to Durkheim and other structuralfunctionalists, crime is functional for society. One of the functions of crime and other deviant behavior is that it strengthens group cohesion: The deviant individual violates rules of conduct which the rest of the community holds in high respect; and when ...
... According to Durkheim and other structuralfunctionalists, crime is functional for society. One of the functions of crime and other deviant behavior is that it strengthens group cohesion: The deviant individual violates rules of conduct which the rest of the community holds in high respect; and when ...
03 functionalist inequality
... believe that inequality is inevitable in society. They go further and argue that we should have economic freedom. We should buy and sell as we wish - this is known as market liberalism. It assumes that all people are customers who are rational and make good choices. As a result, there is a philosoph ...
... believe that inequality is inevitable in society. They go further and argue that we should have economic freedom. We should buy and sell as we wish - this is known as market liberalism. It assumes that all people are customers who are rational and make good choices. As a result, there is a philosoph ...
Fall Semester, 2004
... study of humanity, in all aspects. It is not so much a subject matter in itself as it is a bond between subject matters. Historically, the discipline embraced diverse concerns with kinship, politics, systems of exchange, ritual and religion, amongst others, and usually focused on the “tribal peoples ...
... study of humanity, in all aspects. It is not so much a subject matter in itself as it is a bond between subject matters. Historically, the discipline embraced diverse concerns with kinship, politics, systems of exchange, ritual and religion, amongst others, and usually focused on the “tribal peoples ...
Dynamique des réseaux personnels - Hal-SHS
... listening to telephone conversations these scholars show the role played by communications techniques in keeping relationships alive. The importance of life cycle and the circles in which the subject moves is again apparent in the paper by Alain Degenne and Marie-Odile Lebeaux who analyze the relati ...
... listening to telephone conversations these scholars show the role played by communications techniques in keeping relationships alive. The importance of life cycle and the circles in which the subject moves is again apparent in the paper by Alain Degenne and Marie-Odile Lebeaux who analyze the relati ...
Narratives: Translating Culture to Action.
... ›what we need‹, is not only a matter of inherited beliefs about ›ourselves‹. It is also a question that permanently needs to be reconsidered in an indeterminate environment with its unpredictable dilemmas and its multiple ways of organizing ›things‹. Thus, cul ...
... ›what we need‹, is not only a matter of inherited beliefs about ›ourselves‹. It is also a question that permanently needs to be reconsidered in an indeterminate environment with its unpredictable dilemmas and its multiple ways of organizing ›things‹. Thus, cul ...
Non-Representational Methodologies: Re
... a system. This boundary, combined with a regularity in the interactions or interconnections that constitute the system, allows it to be modeled so that its behavior becomes predictable usually at statistical-population levels. Aspects of sociality outside of the system are “made static” and turned ...
... a system. This boundary, combined with a regularity in the interactions or interconnections that constitute the system, allows it to be modeled so that its behavior becomes predictable usually at statistical-population levels. Aspects of sociality outside of the system are “made static” and turned ...
11 HOW LANGUAGE REALIZES THE WORK OF SCIENCE
... seems constantly filled with evidence, numbers, observations, pictures, to ensure that the formulations correspond to real things. Fat scientific dictionaries, histories of the rise of scientific vocabulary, detailed handbooks of scientific writing, and the teaching of technical writing and scientif ...
... seems constantly filled with evidence, numbers, observations, pictures, to ensure that the formulations correspond to real things. Fat scientific dictionaries, histories of the rise of scientific vocabulary, detailed handbooks of scientific writing, and the teaching of technical writing and scientif ...
for International School Nurses
... Family therapy not enough well-trained personnel here Expressive therapies useful for those who don’t like to talk Peer support groups schools should have them but don’t Online resources be selective – everything written is not true Inter-schools groups would be WONDERFUL School nurses/teachers firs ...
... Family therapy not enough well-trained personnel here Expressive therapies useful for those who don’t like to talk Peer support groups schools should have them but don’t Online resources be selective – everything written is not true Inter-schools groups would be WONDERFUL School nurses/teachers firs ...
Psychopharmacological enhancement: a conceptual framework Open Access
... brain-mind in particular. Positivist philosophers, for example, have emphasized the uniformity of the laws of nature, arguing that the scientific method involves inducing laws from empirical data. Similarly, behaviourism, symbolic cognitivism, and certain approaches within psychoanalysis have emphas ...
... brain-mind in particular. Positivist philosophers, for example, have emphasized the uniformity of the laws of nature, arguing that the scientific method involves inducing laws from empirical data. Similarly, behaviourism, symbolic cognitivism, and certain approaches within psychoanalysis have emphas ...
A Reconstruction of the Ethos of Science
... right and good. They are moral, not technical prescriptions [1957: moral, as well as technical]’ (1942: 118, my italics). In 1942 Meron strictly distinguished between the two types of norms, but gave technical norms and values primacy. That primacy was maintained, but later he did not differentiate ...
... right and good. They are moral, not technical prescriptions [1957: moral, as well as technical]’ (1942: 118, my italics). In 1942 Meron strictly distinguished between the two types of norms, but gave technical norms and values primacy. That primacy was maintained, but later he did not differentiate ...