
towards objective international social inquiry: social science as
... IR : AN ANGLO-AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE It is now fairly widely acknowledged that the modern discipline of International Relations, institutionalised in the early years of the twentieth century, is largely an Anglo-American social science2. What is perhaps less widely acknowledged is how and why this ...
... IR : AN ANGLO-AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE It is now fairly widely acknowledged that the modern discipline of International Relations, institutionalised in the early years of the twentieth century, is largely an Anglo-American social science2. What is perhaps less widely acknowledged is how and why this ...
Paper - The Cambridge Social Ontology Group
... IR : AN ANGLO-AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE It is now fairly widely acknowledged that the modern discipline of International Relations, institutionalised in the early years of the twentieth century, is largely an Anglo-American social science2. What is perhaps less widely acknowledged is how and why this ...
... IR : AN ANGLO-AMERICAN SOCIAL SCIENCE It is now fairly widely acknowledged that the modern discipline of International Relations, institutionalised in the early years of the twentieth century, is largely an Anglo-American social science2. What is perhaps less widely acknowledged is how and why this ...
1 The Enlightenment and the development of social theory
... agreement on dating. There is no consensus on what is to be dated. And once the effort of dating starts in earnest, the object itself begins to disappear. (Bauman 1991: 3). We still need some idea of its genesis. These broad changes have been examined in two ways. First, through the history of ideas ...
... agreement on dating. There is no consensus on what is to be dated. And once the effort of dating starts in earnest, the object itself begins to disappear. (Bauman 1991: 3). We still need some idea of its genesis. These broad changes have been examined in two ways. First, through the history of ideas ...
Professions as Science-Based Occupations
... specifica is what distinguishes professions from other occupations, simultaneously denoting what professions have in common, hence external difference and internal similarity. Further, consistency should prevail between lexical and operational definitions of the phenomenon in question; the definitio ...
... specifica is what distinguishes professions from other occupations, simultaneously denoting what professions have in common, hence external difference and internal similarity. Further, consistency should prevail between lexical and operational definitions of the phenomenon in question; the definitio ...
flexible capitalism
... By the same token, the volume also contributes to the anthropological literature on exchange by introducing work in flexible capitalist settings as a focus worth more sustained attention. It is curious that, while Marx’s writings on labour (understood as a commodity) retrospectively have become adop ...
... By the same token, the volume also contributes to the anthropological literature on exchange by introducing work in flexible capitalist settings as a focus worth more sustained attention. It is curious that, while Marx’s writings on labour (understood as a commodity) retrospectively have become adop ...
The Youth Service Providers Network (YSPN)
... appropriate community-based aftercare in order to assist them in dealing with their injury and to reduce their risk of re-injury. Begun in October 1998, the goals of BostonCares for Injured Youth are to: -Increase the number of intentionally injured youth who receive follow-up care -Reduce the rate ...
... appropriate community-based aftercare in order to assist them in dealing with their injury and to reduce their risk of re-injury. Begun in October 1998, the goals of BostonCares for Injured Youth are to: -Increase the number of intentionally injured youth who receive follow-up care -Reduce the rate ...
A polylogue? Where and how to move with and in
... dynamic movement, or stream of thought, shifting between these I-positions or voices. Again, the key idea is that positioning is relative to something else, in this case, another I-position. However, this conceptualization is quite far removed from its spatial origins. As an aside, we would like to ...
... dynamic movement, or stream of thought, shifting between these I-positions or voices. Again, the key idea is that positioning is relative to something else, in this case, another I-position. However, this conceptualization is quite far removed from its spatial origins. As an aside, we would like to ...
Unit 7 - Human Growth and Development
... Must understand death and dying process and think about needs of dying patients Then health care workers will be able to provide the special care these individuals need Copyright © 2004 by Thomson Delmar Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ...
... Must understand death and dying process and think about needs of dying patients Then health care workers will be able to provide the special care these individuals need Copyright © 2004 by Thomson Delmar Learning. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ...
`Society Can`t Move So Much As a Chair!`—Systems, Structures and
... the bird’s-eye view of systems theory, others address more fundamental questions about the limits of the systems paradigm on the one hand and the limits of agency on the other. These questions are no doubt stimulated by a kind of normative unease: if the social realm were all autopoietic with no sco ...
... the bird’s-eye view of systems theory, others address more fundamental questions about the limits of the systems paradigm on the one hand and the limits of agency on the other. These questions are no doubt stimulated by a kind of normative unease: if the social realm were all autopoietic with no sco ...
VISUALIZING VERY LARGE-SCALE CONVERSATIONS Warren Sack
... converse to introduce ourselves to someone else, to acknowledge another’s presence, to have some fun, to simply cut the silence. Consequently, we cannot assume that machines – i.e., computers and computer networks – designed for the exchange of information will be wonderful media for all kinds of co ...
... converse to introduce ourselves to someone else, to acknowledge another’s presence, to have some fun, to simply cut the silence. Consequently, we cannot assume that machines – i.e., computers and computer networks – designed for the exchange of information will be wonderful media for all kinds of co ...
Why are More Redistributive Social Security Systems - E
... over the aggregate life-cycle income of the contributors of the same age-cohort discounted to the second period of life t + 1. In what follows we consider the case of a dynamically-efficient economy. Thus, we find: Lemma 2 In a dynamically efficient economy, χ is lower than 1 + r. Labor supply is downwa ...
... over the aggregate life-cycle income of the contributors of the same age-cohort discounted to the second period of life t + 1. In what follows we consider the case of a dynamically-efficient economy. Thus, we find: Lemma 2 In a dynamically efficient economy, χ is lower than 1 + r. Labor supply is downwa ...
The Decade of Health Information Technology Begins:
... • Applicable HHS-adopted, recognized or accepted standards are recommended for 2013 and for 2011 – Gaps were identified that may affect 2011 MU measures ...
... • Applicable HHS-adopted, recognized or accepted standards are recommended for 2013 and for 2011 – Gaps were identified that may affect 2011 MU measures ...
- Maynooth University ePrints and eTheses Archive
... In search of the counter culture I'm using the term "counter culture" as a general concept to connect things like the student revolts of the Sixties (Gitlin 1987, Fraser et al. 1988), the sociocultural contestation of the same period (Reich 1971, Musgrove 1974), contemporary "social movements" (Cohe ...
... In search of the counter culture I'm using the term "counter culture" as a general concept to connect things like the student revolts of the Sixties (Gitlin 1987, Fraser et al. 1988), the sociocultural contestation of the same period (Reich 1971, Musgrove 1974), contemporary "social movements" (Cohe ...
Travel and Home: Conceiving Transnational Communities through
... The paradox of the individual emerges for Royce in ethical situations because, on the one hand, “I and only I, whenever I come to my own, can morally justify to myself my own life plan. No outer authority can ever give me the true reason for my duty” (1995, 16). In forming one’s life’s plans, choice ...
... The paradox of the individual emerges for Royce in ethical situations because, on the one hand, “I and only I, whenever I come to my own, can morally justify to myself my own life plan. No outer authority can ever give me the true reason for my duty” (1995, 16). In forming one’s life’s plans, choice ...
Beyond the Third Way - European Consortium for Political Research
... middle path between the antagonism towards state activities by liberals and an uncritical faith in it by socialists. The current welfare state “isn’t geared up to cover new-style risks such as those concerning technological change, social exclusion or the accelerating proportion of one-parent househ ...
... middle path between the antagonism towards state activities by liberals and an uncritical faith in it by socialists. The current welfare state “isn’t geared up to cover new-style risks such as those concerning technological change, social exclusion or the accelerating proportion of one-parent househ ...
Unit Treatment and Rehabilitation-ATD
... The content includes, but is not limited to, concepts of mental health and mental illness; treatment plans and activities designed to stabilize, reorient, and rehabilitate mentally ill and emotionally disturbed patients; techniques of administration of prepackaged medication; observation of patients ...
... The content includes, but is not limited to, concepts of mental health and mental illness; treatment plans and activities designed to stabilize, reorient, and rehabilitate mentally ill and emotionally disturbed patients; techniques of administration of prepackaged medication; observation of patients ...
Timucin YALCINKAYA - Dokuz Eylül Üniversitesi
... globalization as disconnectedly each other. So globalization phenomenon that is on the basis of widescaled explanations and interpretations is an important problematic on core of an evaluation. Globalization is a controversial conception because there is not agreement among scholars on the societal ...
... globalization as disconnectedly each other. So globalization phenomenon that is on the basis of widescaled explanations and interpretations is an important problematic on core of an evaluation. Globalization is a controversial conception because there is not agreement among scholars on the societal ...
Ancient Wisdom and Civilization
... is rather straightforward and can be empirically answered. For if ‘collective wisdom’ is understood as the collective knowledge of a society or culture and ‘civilization’ is associated with a certain level of social or technological advancement, then our question concerns whether collective knowledg ...
... is rather straightforward and can be empirically answered. For if ‘collective wisdom’ is understood as the collective knowledge of a society or culture and ‘civilization’ is associated with a certain level of social or technological advancement, then our question concerns whether collective knowledg ...
multiple choice questions
... a. The poor make up about 40 percent of the Canadian population. b. Children are not considered to be among the chronically poor. c. Individuals who are unable to work because of age or disability are often in the category of the chronically poor. d. Most people who are poor are homeless. ...
... a. The poor make up about 40 percent of the Canadian population. b. Children are not considered to be among the chronically poor. c. Individuals who are unable to work because of age or disability are often in the category of the chronically poor. d. Most people who are poor are homeless. ...
Naturalism and the Enlightenment Ideal
... particular natural sciences are often inappropriate for social science, but by the same token the specific rules of one natural science will often be inappropriate for other natural sciences, too. On the other hand, basic standards of good evidence are often accepted by interpretivists as well as n ...
... particular natural sciences are often inappropriate for social science, but by the same token the specific rules of one natural science will often be inappropriate for other natural sciences, too. On the other hand, basic standards of good evidence are often accepted by interpretivists as well as n ...
REVIEW: Bruno Latour. Reassembling the Social
... review (2009). And this is where a review might end, and certainly this is what has been emphasized in other reviews of the book. The book’s more lasting impact, we contend, is to be found in its second half. While the first part redresses the problems of social science research, Latour devotes the ...
... review (2009). And this is where a review might end, and certainly this is what has been emphasized in other reviews of the book. The book’s more lasting impact, we contend, is to be found in its second half. While the first part redresses the problems of social science research, Latour devotes the ...
The Great Transition
... between tax and spending and between national and local levels. Developing criteria for what money should be raised at these two levels, we argue for a shift from taxing ‘goods’ such as work, to taxing environmental and social ‘bads’ such as pollution, consumption and short-term speculation. We argu ...
... between tax and spending and between national and local levels. Developing criteria for what money should be raised at these two levels, we argue for a shift from taxing ‘goods’ such as work, to taxing environmental and social ‘bads’ such as pollution, consumption and short-term speculation. We argu ...
Social Capital and Conflict - Households in Conflict Network
... allowing us to understand certain economic phenomena that are not driven by classical economic theory. For example strong social ties allow us to achieve goals that involve the cooperation and inputs of more than one player, leading to more effective outputs such as public goods, institutions, and c ...
... allowing us to understand certain economic phenomena that are not driven by classical economic theory. For example strong social ties allow us to achieve goals that involve the cooperation and inputs of more than one player, leading to more effective outputs such as public goods, institutions, and c ...
Majority populations` attitudes towards migrants and minorities
... Another aspect associated with the presence of migrants is also related to the historical records of the United States, where from the 1940s onwards many public debates and actual conflicts centred on equal civil rights for blacks (African Americans), who had been denied such civil rights for decade ...
... Another aspect associated with the presence of migrants is also related to the historical records of the United States, where from the 1940s onwards many public debates and actual conflicts centred on equal civil rights for blacks (African Americans), who had been denied such civil rights for decade ...
Experiments in Context and Contexting
... above quote from Bruno Latour articulates what was developed as a common spirit and approach within actor-network theory and its later versions: nothing can be ‘‘beyond.’’ No one can be reduced to something or someone else. There is a richness in the world that is already there for us to read and tr ...
... above quote from Bruno Latour articulates what was developed as a common spirit and approach within actor-network theory and its later versions: nothing can be ‘‘beyond.’’ No one can be reduced to something or someone else. There is a richness in the world that is already there for us to read and tr ...