A Conceptual Review of the Terms Sustainable Development and
... About the same time, it is published the report of the Club of Rome, which also became known as Meadows Report. Both the conference and the report showed an expectation of reversing the environmental framework and a concern for the future, but none of them demonstrated a perspective of changing the ...
... About the same time, it is published the report of the Club of Rome, which also became known as Meadows Report. Both the conference and the report showed an expectation of reversing the environmental framework and a concern for the future, but none of them demonstrated a perspective of changing the ...
Human Evolution
... thumbs, and the ability to manipulate objects with great precision are all parts of our evolutionary heritage. Members of all cultures make and use tools ranging from fishhooks and spears to microprocessors and satellites. The use of such tools is basic to human life. Without them, human culture wo ...
... thumbs, and the ability to manipulate objects with great precision are all parts of our evolutionary heritage. Members of all cultures make and use tools ranging from fishhooks and spears to microprocessors and satellites. The use of such tools is basic to human life. Without them, human culture wo ...
soc 222 w: social deviance
... Because people in different societies and in different historical eras define deviance differently, it is difficult to isolate behaviors that all would agree deserve the "deviant" label. However, every society has had individuals or groups of individuals that it has, for whatever reason, decided to ...
... Because people in different societies and in different historical eras define deviance differently, it is difficult to isolate behaviors that all would agree deserve the "deviant" label. However, every society has had individuals or groups of individuals that it has, for whatever reason, decided to ...
Duncan Foley Socialist alternatives to capitalism II: Vienna to Santa Fe
... Like capitalist firms, worker-controlled enterprises could form and dissolve in response to market signals to accomplish a decentralized reallocation of resources as society changes and evolves. It is possible to imagine capitalallocating institutions that would permit the free formation of new ente ...
... Like capitalist firms, worker-controlled enterprises could form and dissolve in response to market signals to accomplish a decentralized reallocation of resources as society changes and evolves. It is possible to imagine capitalallocating institutions that would permit the free formation of new ente ...
A2 Biopolitics - Open Evidence Archive
... punishment. In them, there are no longer exceptions. It is the very “right to kill” that has been called into question. However, it is not called into question because of enlightened moral sentiments, but rather because of the deployment of bio-political thinking and practice. For all these reasons, ...
... punishment. In them, there are no longer exceptions. It is the very “right to kill” that has been called into question. However, it is not called into question because of enlightened moral sentiments, but rather because of the deployment of bio-political thinking and practice. For all these reasons, ...
Ritzer, Introduction to Sociology, Second Edition Instructor
... the sentence they actually serve. And such factors are involved in what happens to people after they serve their sentences and whether or not they are likely to end up back in prison. b. The study of crime is referred to as criminology – contemporary focus is on the social context of the criminal ac ...
... the sentence they actually serve. And such factors are involved in what happens to people after they serve their sentences and whether or not they are likely to end up back in prison. b. The study of crime is referred to as criminology – contemporary focus is on the social context of the criminal ac ...
working papers - Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies
... created social networks outside of the political and economic realm, and were similar to contemporary civil society organizations. The Ottoman Vakıf (foundation) system was the foremost example of these establishments. The Vakıf, which carried out social, economic and cultural functions with "minima ...
... created social networks outside of the political and economic realm, and were similar to contemporary civil society organizations. The Ottoman Vakıf (foundation) system was the foremost example of these establishments. The Vakıf, which carried out social, economic and cultural functions with "minima ...
to access article
... expanded notion of performativity would then become crucial for developing a cultural account of economic processes. If circulation is to serve as a useful analytic construct for cultural analysis, it must be conceived as more than simply the movement of people, ideas, and commodities from one cultu ...
... expanded notion of performativity would then become crucial for developing a cultural account of economic processes. If circulation is to serve as a useful analytic construct for cultural analysis, it must be conceived as more than simply the movement of people, ideas, and commodities from one cultu ...
Definition Social Epidemiology has been defined as the branch of
... In order to address health inequities, and inequitable conditions of daily living, it is necessary to address inequities – such as those between men and women – in the way society is organized. This requires a strong public sector that is committed, capable, and adequately financed. To achieve that ...
... In order to address health inequities, and inequitable conditions of daily living, it is necessary to address inequities – such as those between men and women – in the way society is organized. This requires a strong public sector that is committed, capable, and adequately financed. To achieve that ...
topic - Perry Local Schools
... The Age of Revolutions was a period of two world-encompassing and interrelated developments: the democratic revolution and the industrial revolution. Both had political, economic and social consequences on a global scale. ...
... The Age of Revolutions was a period of two world-encompassing and interrelated developments: the democratic revolution and the industrial revolution. Both had political, economic and social consequences on a global scale. ...
Chimpocentrism and reconstructions of human evolution (a timely
... Only when the ovulatory signs of other primate species were taken into account (Burt, 1992; Pawlowski, 1999; Sillén-Tullberg & Møller, 1993), it transpired that the real question was not so much ‘‘why did humans lose exaggerated swellings?’’ as ‘‘why did exaggerated sexual swellings evolve in chimpa ...
... Only when the ovulatory signs of other primate species were taken into account (Burt, 1992; Pawlowski, 1999; Sillén-Tullberg & Møller, 1993), it transpired that the real question was not so much ‘‘why did humans lose exaggerated swellings?’’ as ‘‘why did exaggerated sexual swellings evolve in chimpa ...
FORMATION OF IDENTITY BY MEANS OF SOCIAL STEREOTYPES
... In the result of the process of formation of social identity, an individual acquires values, norms, paradigms and stereotypes that are common to his social group; in addition, they begin to regulate his behavior and perception of reality in the framework of definite social and philosophical categori ...
... In the result of the process of formation of social identity, an individual acquires values, norms, paradigms and stereotypes that are common to his social group; in addition, they begin to regulate his behavior and perception of reality in the framework of definite social and philosophical categori ...
Macrohistory: The Play of Scales1
... get a sense of history as a coherent whole because, as teachers, we do not normally ask what might be the temporal equivalent of the world map. Indeed, the absence of a unifying story may be an important ingredient in the pervasive quality of loss and disorientation in modern life that the French so ...
... get a sense of history as a coherent whole because, as teachers, we do not normally ask what might be the temporal equivalent of the world map. Indeed, the absence of a unifying story may be an important ingredient in the pervasive quality of loss and disorientation in modern life that the French so ...
The Implications of Postmodernism for Moral Education
... The idea of reason being inextricably equated with the workings of power strongly implies that the modernist concept of autonomy, the conviction that individuals and social groupings can define themselves and conduct social relations independent of external determinants or influences, must be reject ...
... The idea of reason being inextricably equated with the workings of power strongly implies that the modernist concept of autonomy, the conviction that individuals and social groupings can define themselves and conduct social relations independent of external determinants or influences, must be reject ...
The affirmation of ordinary life: curricula structure for home education
... one that “achieves that which it sets out to achieve”. A “suitable” education is one that: “primarily equips a child for life within the community of which he is a member, rather than the way of life in the country as a whole, as long as it does not foreclose the child’s options in later years to ad ...
... one that “achieves that which it sets out to achieve”. A “suitable” education is one that: “primarily equips a child for life within the community of which he is a member, rather than the way of life in the country as a whole, as long as it does not foreclose the child’s options in later years to ad ...