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Eric Vanhaute, Hanne Cottyn, Yang Wang C
Eric Vanhaute, Hanne Cottyn, Yang Wang C

... frontier-zones or zones of contact (Hall 2000). These zones, where non-, semi- and fully-integrated actors and structures meet, are vital to the inherent expansive drive of historical capitalism. The processes of interaction that emanate from these contacts are challenged by pressures for incorporat ...
Guiding Principles for Quality in Assisted Living
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... programs and performance excellence for the assisted living profession. Performance objectives, data collection, benchmarking, measurement of resident and family satisfaction and workforce development are some of the components of a quality improvement program. These tools may be used by providers, ...
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... Bring the Ontological Foundation Back into the Research of EAP Objectivism vs. Constructivism: ….  Constructivism: ….  By constructivism, it refers to the research orientation which underlines the essential roles of human ideas, believes, and efforts in the constitution of the social world and m ...
Aalborg Universitet Social Compacts in Regional and Global Perspective Schmidt, Johannes Dragsbæk
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... it derives from a complex aggregation of multi-level games played on multi-layered institutional playing fields, above and across, as well as within, state boundaries. These three-level games are played out by state actors and other political forces, as well as market actors and cultural actors.” (C ...
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... apparently private individual acts. These all-pervading social relations cannot be reduced to psychological, biological or economic factors. Social relations constitute a fascinating reality which must be understood in its own terms. To use Durkheim’s term, social relations are sacred; in their effe ...
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... symbols and beliefs in terms of the conditions and processes of the actual lives of real people, as individuals and groups within concrete social contexts. Then as now, it is assumed, religious beliefs and practices emerge in response to very concrete questioning about the meaning of life in particu ...
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... conventional understanding of capital can be fully reduced to 'physical capital'. Capital in its standard sense embraces some items - such as financial instruments that have a value not primarily reflective of their qualities as physical things. However, such items, along with physical resources, do ...
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... order to view the world from their perspective and to better understand their culture. This practice is known as participant observation in anthropological field work. Regarding the objectivity, Levi-Strauss (op. cit) writes, “The objectivity aimed at by anthropology is on higher level: The observer ...
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... can be found contrasting views of history: the tragic perennialism of Niebuhr alongside the contingent discontinuity of Morgenthau, Carr and Kennan. But despite their surface-level differences, these scholars shared a common interest in historical research, whether this was conducted in order to rev ...
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How do the Wealthiest Poles give?

... personal satisfaction. They care for the younger generation – children and youth as they believe it is the best investment. Their philanthropy focus mostly on relief work – eradicating poverty and enabling equal opportunities for disadvantaged groups. They are much less likely to support innovative ...
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Dialogues in social psychology - European Doctorate on Social

... that dispenses the study of mental representations and assumes the social construction of meaning. This conceptual space organized in four quadrants has, of course, to taken as a large scale map. That is, it has to be taken as a simplified version of a complex territory. Detail, alternative roads, ...
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... group identities and stereotypes. Providing a foundation for larger national identities, these attachments are shown to be instrumental in mobilizing group members for collective action leading to war.2 The research reviewed is organized into a framework that connects social-psychological processes ...
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... International aid organisations, voluntary associations, social science and neo-liberal reform programmes have in the last decade turned out to use more or less the same vocabulary. Buzzwords such as ‘empowerment’, ‘participation’, ‘mobilisation’, ‘civil society’, ‘capacity building’, ‘local knowled ...
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... construction of a middle ground perspective which brings macro societal forces and processes, as well as individuals’ experiences together. The discussion starts by introducing the interpretative approach which entails a relevant epistemological turn in medical anthropology, shifting from where vari ...
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Research Paper Series Thomas Aquinas on Justice as a Global Virtue

... status because human intellect can be cognizant of the order that governs life by recognizing the natural laws of both human and sub-human life. Human reason can understand how natural laws orient all beings towards their good, which, when realized, perfects them (De Ver. q. 21, a. 1). Unlike anima ...
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Community development

The United Nations defines Community development as ""a process where community members come together to take collective action and generate solutions to common problems."" It is a broad term given to the practices of civic leaders, activists, involved citizens and professionals to improve various aspects of communities, typically aiming to build stronger and more resilient local communities.Community development seeks to empower individuals and groups of people with the skills they need to effect change within their communities. These skills are often created through the formation of large social groups working for a common agenda. Community developers must understand both how to work with individuals and how to affect communities' positions within the context of larger social institutions.Community development as a term has taken off widely in anglophone countries i.e. the US, UK, Australia, Canada and New Zealand and other countries in the Commonwealth. It is also used in some countries in eastern Europe with active community development associations in Hungary and Romania. The Community Development Journal, published by Oxford University Press, since 1966 has aimed to be the major forum for research and dissemination of international community development theory and practice.Community development approaches are recognised internationally. These methods and approaches have been acknowledged as significant for local social, economic, cultural, environmental and political development by such organisations as the UN, WHO, OECD, World Bank, Council of Europe and EU.
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