Bachelor Thesis Marketing Reference Group Influence and
... result in better job opportunities and hence higher future salaries. Either way, policymakers, whether governmental or corporate, could develop and adapt strategies of encouragement or discouragement towards reference groups to reach specified goals (e.g. decrease of student debts, more successful j ...
... result in better job opportunities and hence higher future salaries. Either way, policymakers, whether governmental or corporate, could develop and adapt strategies of encouragement or discouragement towards reference groups to reach specified goals (e.g. decrease of student debts, more successful j ...
Excellence and Enjoyment: social and emotional aspects of learning
... • understand and value the differences and commonalities between people, respecting the right of others to have beliefs and values different from their own. Most social, emotional and behavioural skills are developmental and change over time. For example, if we think about the experience of loss, we ...
... • understand and value the differences and commonalities between people, respecting the right of others to have beliefs and values different from their own. Most social, emotional and behavioural skills are developmental and change over time. For example, if we think about the experience of loss, we ...
chapter - International Institute of Anthropology
... uses his or her skills to determine if a program has succeeded in its objectives. becomes an active supporter of a particular group of people. imparts cultural knowledge about certain populations to groups working in crosscultural situations. d. serves as a liaison between the program planner and ad ...
... uses his or her skills to determine if a program has succeeded in its objectives. becomes an active supporter of a particular group of people. imparts cultural knowledge about certain populations to groups working in crosscultural situations. d. serves as a liaison between the program planner and ad ...
Ideology and Utopia in Mannheim
... and Utopia” (Kettler and Meja 3). It has also been observed that “It is safe to say when sociologists today think of the sociology of knowledge, pro or con, they usually do so in terms of Mannheim’s formulation of it” (Berger & Luckmann 9). It is therefore impossible to critically study and evaluate ...
... and Utopia” (Kettler and Meja 3). It has also been observed that “It is safe to say when sociologists today think of the sociology of knowledge, pro or con, they usually do so in terms of Mannheim’s formulation of it” (Berger & Luckmann 9). It is therefore impossible to critically study and evaluate ...
Notes on the Ontology of Design
... (Rio + 20, June 2012), one might think that not much has changed since; but this would be too quick a judgment; although the situation continues to be dire, and despite crucial continuities at deep cultural levels as we shall see, today’s social and design contexts are significantly different than t ...
... (Rio + 20, June 2012), one might think that not much has changed since; but this would be too quick a judgment; although the situation continues to be dire, and despite crucial continuities at deep cultural levels as we shall see, today’s social and design contexts are significantly different than t ...
Understanding Organizational Culture
... enormous variation in the definitions of this term and even more in the use of the term ‘culture’. ‘Culture’ has no fixed or broadly agreed meaning even in anthropology (Borowsky, 1994; Ortner, 1984), but variation in its use is especially noticeable in the literature on organizational culture. This ...
... enormous variation in the definitions of this term and even more in the use of the term ‘culture’. ‘Culture’ has no fixed or broadly agreed meaning even in anthropology (Borowsky, 1994; Ortner, 1984), but variation in its use is especially noticeable in the literature on organizational culture. This ...
Ernest Gellner`s Legacy
... Austrian rule) and in the British colonial policy of indirect rule. As Gellner puts it, what attracted Malinowski to indirect rule was the fact that ‘it limits the political power of local rulers’ while continuing to ‘encourage, foster, and sustain the cultural expression of the indigenous society, ...
... Austrian rule) and in the British colonial policy of indirect rule. As Gellner puts it, what attracted Malinowski to indirect rule was the fact that ‘it limits the political power of local rulers’ while continuing to ‘encourage, foster, and sustain the cultural expression of the indigenous society, ...
Meatify the Weak! Cannibalism and (Post) Colonial
... were incriminated of cannibalistic preferences (they were accused of everything the Christian majority considered morally wrong). In addition, in the early ages of colonialism but especially in the nineteenth century, non-Western groups have recurrently been suspected of man-eating habits. In fact, ...
... were incriminated of cannibalistic preferences (they were accused of everything the Christian majority considered morally wrong). In addition, in the early ages of colonialism but especially in the nineteenth century, non-Western groups have recurrently been suspected of man-eating habits. In fact, ...
Latin American Critical Thought
... range of topics brought about by the re-emergence of critical thought but its outstanding features. With this, we expect to encourage the fluid and symmetrical exchange between peers throughout the world. We also expect to encourage discussions that cover theoretical contents, empirical references a ...
... range of topics brought about by the re-emergence of critical thought but its outstanding features. With this, we expect to encourage the fluid and symmetrical exchange between peers throughout the world. We also expect to encourage discussions that cover theoretical contents, empirical references a ...
TAG program final
... consumed them. I argue that figurines are best understood as material agents whose efficacy and social significance arises not only through cultural practices associated with their consumption as finished forms, but also through the practices involved in all stages of their production. Furthermore, ...
... consumed them. I argue that figurines are best understood as material agents whose efficacy and social significance arises not only through cultural practices associated with their consumption as finished forms, but also through the practices involved in all stages of their production. Furthermore, ...
Edwin Ardener`s Prophetic Vision
... linguistic philosophers as Austin and Wittgenstein to the conceptual priority of use over reference was a significant influence, one that we can see especially well explored in the work, cited by Ardener, of another of his students, the late Malcolm Crick (1976). Ardener’s own statistical work on de ...
... linguistic philosophers as Austin and Wittgenstein to the conceptual priority of use over reference was a significant influence, one that we can see especially well explored in the work, cited by Ardener, of another of his students, the late Malcolm Crick (1976). Ardener’s own statistical work on de ...
explorations in drama, theatre and educati on
... adopting a theoretical stance that seeks causal connections which cannot be understood through ‘experience’ alone. A theoretical position is of necessity abstract involving deductive thinking rather than only empirical observation. Causal connections cannot be understood by experience because neithe ...
... adopting a theoretical stance that seeks causal connections which cannot be understood through ‘experience’ alone. A theoretical position is of necessity abstract involving deductive thinking rather than only empirical observation. Causal connections cannot be understood by experience because neithe ...
Sustainable Futures - Ympäristö ja kehitys ry
... of last-person-first and environmental sustainability. The future scenarios this book presents are: degrowth for the over-consuming class, steady-state for the sustainable class, and empowerment for the struggling class. Domination through power hierarchies leads to environmental unsustainability and ...
... of last-person-first and environmental sustainability. The future scenarios this book presents are: degrowth for the over-consuming class, steady-state for the sustainable class, and empowerment for the struggling class. Domination through power hierarchies leads to environmental unsustainability and ...
No. 69.pmd - Society of Africanist Archaeologists
... has led to the development of many other theories to explain human culture. Although theologians have seriously attacked evolutionism, because it contravenes the divine process of development as presented in the Bible, evolutionism still remains as the scientific explanation to human development. Al ...
... has led to the development of many other theories to explain human culture. Although theologians have seriously attacked evolutionism, because it contravenes the divine process of development as presented in the Bible, evolutionism still remains as the scientific explanation to human development. Al ...
Jean Baudrillard
... one thing distinguishes modernity : it always wants to be 'contemporary,' i.e ., it seeks global simultaneity. After first privileging the dimension of progress and the future, it seems to confound itself more and more today with the present, the immediate, the everyday - the reverse, pure and simpl ...
... one thing distinguishes modernity : it always wants to be 'contemporary,' i.e ., it seeks global simultaneity. After first privileging the dimension of progress and the future, it seems to confound itself more and more today with the present, the immediate, the everyday - the reverse, pure and simpl ...
PDF of this page - University of North Dakota
... do these methods work? How do we interpret and understand the past using archaeological hypotheses, explanations, models and theories? Case studies will be drawn from different regions, cultures, and time periods to illustrate course concepts. F,S. ANTH 200. World Prehistory. 3 Credits. In this cour ...
... do these methods work? How do we interpret and understand the past using archaeological hypotheses, explanations, models and theories? Case studies will be drawn from different regions, cultures, and time periods to illustrate course concepts. F,S. ANTH 200. World Prehistory. 3 Credits. In this cour ...
ETHNICITY IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES A view and a review of the
... differentiation is based on social definitions of "physical" and/or psychocultural differences between ethnic groups, inter-ethnic relations are at the same time closely related to the other major social cleavages and relations, namely, between nation states, classes and genders. One may contend tha ...
... differentiation is based on social definitions of "physical" and/or psychocultural differences between ethnic groups, inter-ethnic relations are at the same time closely related to the other major social cleavages and relations, namely, between nation states, classes and genders. One may contend tha ...
athabasca university change in systems: theory and implications by
... This particular point of departure was likely underscored by an invitation, early in my education as a psychotherapist, to develop cultural competence by reflecting on how my cultural positioning affects my interactions with differently positioned others. This involved reflecting upon ‘cultural iden ...
... This particular point of departure was likely underscored by an invitation, early in my education as a psychotherapist, to develop cultural competence by reflecting on how my cultural positioning affects my interactions with differently positioned others. This involved reflecting upon ‘cultural iden ...
Törnberg, Petter - Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences
... the real entities of the social world (Byrne, 2002, p.136)? Are higher-level organizations (like firms, tribes, and states) fully explainable in terms of the preferences of their members, or are higher-level organizations also social individuals with their own properties and powers? Can individual a ...
... the real entities of the social world (Byrne, 2002, p.136)? Are higher-level organizations (like firms, tribes, and states) fully explainable in terms of the preferences of their members, or are higher-level organizations also social individuals with their own properties and powers? Can individual a ...
Functionalists Write, Too: Frazer/Malinowski and the
... theatrical allusion to the drama of the Dane. Malinowski’s structuralfunctionalist successors tried to purge such ‘digressions’ from the mono graph genre. Evans-Pritchard, for example, branded them with the least flattering comparison he could think of, Mead’s Coming of Age in Samoa, this ‘discurs ...
... theatrical allusion to the drama of the Dane. Malinowski’s structuralfunctionalist successors tried to purge such ‘digressions’ from the mono graph genre. Evans-Pritchard, for example, branded them with the least flattering comparison he could think of, Mead’s Coming of Age in Samoa, this ‘discurs ...
Reflection and Reflexivity in Anthropology
... Trobriand Islanders, which he had published in Argonauts of the Western Pacific, for which he lived in "as close a contact with the natives as possible." This method was significantly different than that used in salvage ethnography in the United States and it provided a conception of ethnographic re ...
... Trobriand Islanders, which he had published in Argonauts of the Western Pacific, for which he lived in "as close a contact with the natives as possible." This method was significantly different than that used in salvage ethnography in the United States and it provided a conception of ethnographic re ...
Cultural Relativism
... judgments are valid, no moral judgment is universally valid. Every moral judgment is culturally relative.13 ...
... judgments are valid, no moral judgment is universally valid. Every moral judgment is culturally relative.13 ...
Where is anthropology? - DAN
... sociology.15 However, in the process of selective absorption of intellectual fashions, we are and have been affected by the anxieties of the academic metropoleis — whether in the present state of fragmentation or, before, when high hopes were at stake for arriving at a definition of the discipline.1 ...
... sociology.15 However, in the process of selective absorption of intellectual fashions, we are and have been affected by the anxieties of the academic metropoleis — whether in the present state of fragmentation or, before, when high hopes were at stake for arriving at a definition of the discipline.1 ...
Ladislav Holý and Ernest Gellner
... wholes formed the basis of recruitment to different kinds of activities. I did research on this problem in the Sudan, and my first work on the Berti was concerned with how far kinship and local or neighbourly relations determined recruitment to political, economic and ritual activities. That was why ...
... wholes formed the basis of recruitment to different kinds of activities. I did research on this problem in the Sudan, and my first work on the Berti was concerned with how far kinship and local or neighbourly relations determined recruitment to political, economic and ritual activities. That was why ...
Beyond Cultural History? The Material Turn, Praxiography, and
... chapter, Porter noted “the domain in which writing about the history of the body has skyrocketed most stupendously: the theoretical dimension. Drawing on critical theory, postmodernism, post-Foucauldianism, and other ‘-isms’ embodying the linguistic turn, and also on feminist, gender, gay and lesbia ...
... chapter, Porter noted “the domain in which writing about the history of the body has skyrocketed most stupendously: the theoretical dimension. Drawing on critical theory, postmodernism, post-Foucauldianism, and other ‘-isms’ embodying the linguistic turn, and also on feminist, gender, gay and lesbia ...
Intercultural competence
Intercultural competence is the ability to communicate effectively and appropriately with people of other cultures: Appropriately. Valued rules, norms, and expectations of the relationship are not violated significantly. Effectively. Valued goals or rewards (relative to costs and alternatives) are accomplished.In interactions with people from foreign cultures, a person who is interculturally competent understands the culture-specific concepts of perception, thinking, feeling, and acting.Intercultural competence is also called ""cross-cultural competence"" (3C).