Social studies of social science
... articles and reports to locate additional materials. New bibliographic tools have been useful but most important were old-fashioned spade work and actually reading what we found because searches frequently turned up materials that appeared relevant at first glance but on closer inspection were not. ...
... articles and reports to locate additional materials. New bibliographic tools have been useful but most important were old-fashioned spade work and actually reading what we found because searches frequently turned up materials that appeared relevant at first glance but on closer inspection were not. ...
High School Social Studies State and District Outcomes Summary
... 1.1a Evaluate a historical source for point of view and historical context 1.1b Gather and analyze historical information, including contradictory data, from a variety of primary and secondary sources, including sources located on the Internet, to support or reject hypotheses 1.1c Construct and defe ...
... 1.1a Evaluate a historical source for point of view and historical context 1.1b Gather and analyze historical information, including contradictory data, from a variety of primary and secondary sources, including sources located on the Internet, to support or reject hypotheses 1.1c Construct and defe ...
Discourse Studies
... words – such as ‘we’, ‘here’ and even ‘the’ – that are daily used in the media and are, as such, unnoticed for they are not the discursive focus of attention, as they ‘point’ to other topics. In this way, small deictic words can contribute to reproduce the nation-state as the ‘natural’ place in whic ...
... words – such as ‘we’, ‘here’ and even ‘the’ – that are daily used in the media and are, as such, unnoticed for they are not the discursive focus of attention, as they ‘point’ to other topics. In this way, small deictic words can contribute to reproduce the nation-state as the ‘natural’ place in whic ...
Trust, Social Networks and the Informal Economy: A Comparative
... We understand “trust” or confidence as a social concept whose meaning is culturally determined and therefore it should be ethnographically described, as it does not have the same meaning in different societies and for different situations (Rose-Akerman 2001: 420; Lomnitz 1977: 196). In general, trus ...
... We understand “trust” or confidence as a social concept whose meaning is culturally determined and therefore it should be ethnographically described, as it does not have the same meaning in different societies and for different situations (Rose-Akerman 2001: 420; Lomnitz 1977: 196). In general, trus ...
View our upper division courses for Fall 2017 here
... As the lifeblood of Texas culture, the state's history has long represented a unique identity, although one based mostly on 19th-century stereotypes. Students taking this course will expand their views beyond such narrow depictions and come to embrace a new usable past capable of informing 21st-cent ...
... As the lifeblood of Texas culture, the state's history has long represented a unique identity, although one based mostly on 19th-century stereotypes. Students taking this course will expand their views beyond such narrow depictions and come to embrace a new usable past capable of informing 21st-cent ...
9/8/09 - Unicef
... autonomy. It may also affect indirectly through impacting funding of basic social services, reduction of job opportunities for their parents, and increasing the stress of raising children in a crisis context. Conceição et al. (2009, p. 5) note that “less skilled and poorer workers are often more lik ...
... autonomy. It may also affect indirectly through impacting funding of basic social services, reduction of job opportunities for their parents, and increasing the stress of raising children in a crisis context. Conceição et al. (2009, p. 5) note that “less skilled and poorer workers are often more lik ...
Τα Ιδρύματα Αγωγής ανηλίκων: Μία ανάλυση της ελληνικής εμπειρίας
... aid. Therefore, phenomena of relapse of juveniles that are re-admitted to Correcting Institutions or Reformatories for juveniles are quite often; 7) Members of the scientific personnel that were more recently hired were found more eager in their service, which may imply greater sensitization on thei ...
... aid. Therefore, phenomena of relapse of juveniles that are re-admitted to Correcting Institutions or Reformatories for juveniles are quite often; 7) Members of the scientific personnel that were more recently hired were found more eager in their service, which may imply greater sensitization on thei ...
Discourse Analysis and the Production of Meaning in
... understanding19, it is only a matter of choice which strategy is chosen for understanding our objects of study. When the nature of the social world is conceptualized as different from the natural world, paradoxes may be probably more frequent and regularities less common. For this reason, social res ...
... understanding19, it is only a matter of choice which strategy is chosen for understanding our objects of study. When the nature of the social world is conceptualized as different from the natural world, paradoxes may be probably more frequent and regularities less common. For this reason, social res ...
Creating Ties That Bind - University of Virginia Darden School of
... So what is the problem here? We conceive of it this way: within the ISCT framework, all decisions ...
... So what is the problem here? We conceive of it this way: within the ISCT framework, all decisions ...
Manifesto for a Relational Sociology
... mark itself off from economics, which endorsed the rational-actor approach early on, sociology had from its beginnings “a fundamental need of a theory of action that defined different types of action on the basis of their specific difference from rational action. It required a theory of society as a ...
... mark itself off from economics, which endorsed the rational-actor approach early on, sociology had from its beginnings “a fundamental need of a theory of action that defined different types of action on the basis of their specific difference from rational action. It required a theory of society as a ...
D1.1 Chapter 9: `How does the analysis of Mann enrich the `
... interaction at the boundaries of which is a certain level of interaction cleavage between it and its environment” (Mann 1986). Mann points to the diversity of goals humans have (and the resulting inability to build a theory on this). Power is a ‘generalized means’ (Parson as cited in Mann, 1986) for ...
... interaction at the boundaries of which is a certain level of interaction cleavage between it and its environment” (Mann 1986). Mann points to the diversity of goals humans have (and the resulting inability to build a theory on this). Power is a ‘generalized means’ (Parson as cited in Mann, 1986) for ...
Welfare: basics
... But can this relationship always be set up in a coherent fashion? If so, then we can use the “constitution” as a device for aggregating individual views ...
... But can this relationship always be set up in a coherent fashion? If so, then we can use the “constitution” as a device for aggregating individual views ...
martin heidegger and paul kurtz on humanism
... is Being-with in the world. Being-alone is a deficient mode of Being-with. The experience of alienation is a deficient mode of Being-with. Others are always already there even though our experience may set us apart from them. This displays the power of imagination in that even though no one is near ...
... is Being-with in the world. Being-alone is a deficient mode of Being-with. The experience of alienation is a deficient mode of Being-with. Others are always already there even though our experience may set us apart from them. This displays the power of imagination in that even though no one is near ...