... contemporary moment to describe the use of virtual channels for social and political activism. Some studies trace the use of cyberspace for activism back to the 1990s with the Lotus Market Place case where thousands of people protested against Lotus Software for releasing a product that made names, ...
Levels and Dimensions of Discourse Analysis
... along the precise delimitation of the levels and dimensions of the structural theories. They may involve complex cognitive strategies of processing information, online procedures, handling simultaneous levels and parallel information and so on. Other notions such as goals, plans, scripts, or cogniti ...
... along the precise delimitation of the levels and dimensions of the structural theories. They may involve complex cognitive strategies of processing information, online procedures, handling simultaneous levels and parallel information and so on. Other notions such as goals, plans, scripts, or cogniti ...
Humour and Social Protest: An Introduction
... early modern period. During carnivals and similar festive periods former ranks and hierarchies disappeared. All participants to the carnival were considered equal and free and familiar contacts were allowed between different social classes and positions. These ritual settings stressed the allhuman, ...
... early modern period. During carnivals and similar festive periods former ranks and hierarchies disappeared. All participants to the carnival were considered equal and free and familiar contacts were allowed between different social classes and positions. These ritual settings stressed the allhuman, ...
Theory European Journal of Political
... Smith: Work and the Struggle for Recognition us now look at the conception Honneth actually came up with. As I said, Honneth is guided by the young Marx’s thought that work has not only an economic, but a moral and emancipatory significance. The moral significance of work lies, to put it bluntly, i ...
... Smith: Work and the Struggle for Recognition us now look at the conception Honneth actually came up with. As I said, Honneth is guided by the young Marx’s thought that work has not only an economic, but a moral and emancipatory significance. The moral significance of work lies, to put it bluntly, i ...
Computing point-of-view - MIT Media Lab
... through machine readings of egocentric (self-revealing, selfdescribing) texts and 3) organizing the model into coherency; and for 4) animating point-of-view placed inside interactive artifacts such as virtual mentors by causing the artifact to judge and react to a very broad range of things placed ...
... through machine readings of egocentric (self-revealing, selfdescribing) texts and 3) organizing the model into coherency; and for 4) animating point-of-view placed inside interactive artifacts such as virtual mentors by causing the artifact to judge and react to a very broad range of things placed ...
Subject and Subject position in Laclau`s discourse theory Allan
... Coming from the tradition of structural Marxism (Ernesto Laclau 1977; Althusser 1969a; Althusser and Balibar 1977)one of the most significant achievements of Laclau was to articulate a basic post-structuralist idea of subject-positions with a Lacanian theory of the subject beyond or before positioni ...
... Coming from the tradition of structural Marxism (Ernesto Laclau 1977; Althusser 1969a; Althusser and Balibar 1977)one of the most significant achievements of Laclau was to articulate a basic post-structuralist idea of subject-positions with a Lacanian theory of the subject beyond or before positioni ...
Sociotechnical Roles for Sociotechnical Systems - A
... distributed work, which are often burdened with additional workload resulting from the effort necessary to build up a common ground for collaboration. However, in computer science and the field of computersupported cooperative work (CSCW), roles are often merely used as a means to administer access ...
... distributed work, which are often burdened with additional workload resulting from the effort necessary to build up a common ground for collaboration. However, in computer science and the field of computersupported cooperative work (CSCW), roles are often merely used as a means to administer access ...
Why Did Austrian Business Oppose Welfare Cuts? How the
... Downloaded from cps.sagepub.com at Max Planck Society on July 2, 2015 ...
... Downloaded from cps.sagepub.com at Max Planck Society on July 2, 2015 ...
“Turning the Social Contract Inside Out: Neoliberal Governance and
... inside out—and not just by management, but through the votes of precarious workers situated as human capitals, themselves squeezed by economic needs as well as neoliberal conditions and rationality. Some might view the very premise of the film cynically, and argue that after all the final say over ...
... inside out—and not just by management, but through the votes of precarious workers situated as human capitals, themselves squeezed by economic needs as well as neoliberal conditions and rationality. Some might view the very premise of the film cynically, and argue that after all the final say over ...
10_chapter 3
... 3. Value as a "Standard for Desirability" is one of the widely accepted definitions in the discipl ine of Social Sciences (International Encyclopedia of Social Science: 1968 :254). Sociological study, being a scientific study of society, is as old as the human thought itself. Initially the study of ...
... 3. Value as a "Standard for Desirability" is one of the widely accepted definitions in the discipl ine of Social Sciences (International Encyclopedia of Social Science: 1968 :254). Sociological study, being a scientific study of society, is as old as the human thought itself. Initially the study of ...
- Munich Personal RePEc Archive
... taken civilized man and transplanted him into the state of nature. Instead, Rousseau says, one must examine man “as nature had formed him” (1754: 376). Although the state of nature never actually existed in history (Rousseau 1754: 377, 380), the concept is useful as a thoughtexperiment to discover w ...
... taken civilized man and transplanted him into the state of nature. Instead, Rousseau says, one must examine man “as nature had formed him” (1754: 376). Although the state of nature never actually existed in history (Rousseau 1754: 377, 380), the concept is useful as a thoughtexperiment to discover w ...
Theoretical foundation of Educational Administration and Policy
... 1. Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate in economics in 1998, in his Nobel Prize Lecture entitled The Possibility of Social Choice, defines social choice as “the choice ‘of the people, by the people, for the people’.” (Sen, 2002, P. 66) 2. The impossibility of social choice: The conventional view in econ ...
... 1. Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate in economics in 1998, in his Nobel Prize Lecture entitled The Possibility of Social Choice, defines social choice as “the choice ‘of the people, by the people, for the people’.” (Sen, 2002, P. 66) 2. The impossibility of social choice: The conventional view in econ ...
Social Capital and Civil Society - Exploring a Complex Relationship
... differences of opinion and interpretation have meant that civil society has come to be defined mostly negatively, by that which is not the state or the market, and, as such, it is often seen as a vague and unwieldy analytical concept. Nevertheless the term Civil Society is at its most constructive w ...
... differences of opinion and interpretation have meant that civil society has come to be defined mostly negatively, by that which is not the state or the market, and, as such, it is often seen as a vague and unwieldy analytical concept. Nevertheless the term Civil Society is at its most constructive w ...
LINKAGES BETWEEN INFORMAL AND FORMAL SOCIAL CAPITAL
... etc., and constitutes the major type of social capital in the work of Putnam (2000), the latter implies various forms of getting together with family members, friends, work colleagues, neighbors etc., and refers to more or less regular social interactions in the absence of a formal associational fr ...
... etc., and constitutes the major type of social capital in the work of Putnam (2000), the latter implies various forms of getting together with family members, friends, work colleagues, neighbors etc., and refers to more or less regular social interactions in the absence of a formal associational fr ...
Elements of Culturally Competent Counseling
... contemporary society is reflected not only along racial/ethnic dimensions, but is evident in other aspects of culture such as socioeconomic status, religion/spirituality, sexual orientation, and ability status. Given this reality, what are the elements of culture in counseling? What is the nature of ...
... contemporary society is reflected not only along racial/ethnic dimensions, but is evident in other aspects of culture such as socioeconomic status, religion/spirituality, sexual orientation, and ability status. Given this reality, what are the elements of culture in counseling? What is the nature of ...
quantitative and qualitative - BU Blogs
... examples of a similar phenomenon. They are apples, rather than apples and oranges, to use the time-honored metaphor. Note that comparing apples and oranges is not prohibited; however, to do so we must adopt a higher-order concept – e.g., fruit – according to which apples and oranges are similar. Com ...
... examples of a similar phenomenon. They are apples, rather than apples and oranges, to use the time-honored metaphor. Note that comparing apples and oranges is not prohibited; however, to do so we must adopt a higher-order concept – e.g., fruit – according to which apples and oranges are similar. Com ...
Sociotechnical Roles for Sociotechnical Systems
... although the latter is often derived from aspects of the operational and organizational structure of an organization and can therefore be interpreted as subset of the former. Furthermore, it is noteworthy that roles serve as a rather static concept to describe a position’s functions and tasks in suc ...
... although the latter is often derived from aspects of the operational and organizational structure of an organization and can therefore be interpreted as subset of the former. Furthermore, it is noteworthy that roles serve as a rather static concept to describe a position’s functions and tasks in suc ...
- Digital Commons @ New Haven
... interactionist perspective. While abandoning the idea of individual, social pathologies, the perspective maintained a transactional approach in which unequal cultural power underlies all interactions: “The definitions of the world… express the life situation of those groups which hold the monopoly ...
... interactionist perspective. While abandoning the idea of individual, social pathologies, the perspective maintained a transactional approach in which unequal cultural power underlies all interactions: “The definitions of the world… express the life situation of those groups which hold the monopoly ...
Using CMM - Pearce Associates
... This is a personal story. An account from the perspective of the impersonal third-person would be untrue. That's not how it happened. I think that I am the first person ever to use the awkward phrase "coordinated management of meaning." Of course, tones of voice are often more informative than the v ...
... This is a personal story. An account from the perspective of the impersonal third-person would be untrue. That's not how it happened. I think that I am the first person ever to use the awkward phrase "coordinated management of meaning." Of course, tones of voice are often more informative than the v ...
3. Geography and GIS
... science, therefore, facts speak for themselves. The scientist, having decided what to study, is a neutral observer-reporter, presenting material using accepted languages and categories (and, if necessary, proposing extensions to them). The acid test of the validity of a piece of science is that when ...
... science, therefore, facts speak for themselves. The scientist, having decided what to study, is a neutral observer-reporter, presenting material using accepted languages and categories (and, if necessary, proposing extensions to them). The acid test of the validity of a piece of science is that when ...
Bunge :Ten Modes of Individualism—None of Which Works—And
... pervasiveness, individualism—as will be argued below—does not constitute a viable worldview. The multiplicity of components of individualism, let alone their interdependence, is seldom if ever acknowledged. But, if ignored, none of the individual components of individualism can be correctly understo ...
... pervasiveness, individualism—as will be argued below—does not constitute a viable worldview. The multiplicity of components of individualism, let alone their interdependence, is seldom if ever acknowledged. But, if ignored, none of the individual components of individualism can be correctly understo ...
Strengthening Our Resilience to Agents of Radicalization and Their
... Agents of radicalization, whether in the real or the virtual world (i.e. over the Internet), seek to manipulate the thoughts and legitimate perceptions of people in order to further a particular set of ideological concerns or a political agenda. Little by little, they get their audience to draw dire ...
... Agents of radicalization, whether in the real or the virtual world (i.e. over the Internet), seek to manipulate the thoughts and legitimate perceptions of people in order to further a particular set of ideological concerns or a political agenda. Little by little, they get their audience to draw dire ...
max weber and emile durkheim
... of each takes account of that of others” (Weber, 1968: 26). Weber understands social regularity as the harmony of individualistic social actions and meanings individuals attribute to the actions of other people. For Weber: …in a sociological context to a state, a nation, a corporation, a family, or ...
... of each takes account of that of others” (Weber, 1968: 26). Weber understands social regularity as the harmony of individualistic social actions and meanings individuals attribute to the actions of other people. For Weber: …in a sociological context to a state, a nation, a corporation, a family, or ...
Anti-Colonialism and Education
... is often said that globalization is the new word for imperialism. History and context are crucial for anti-colonial undertakings. Understanding our collective past is significant for pursuing political resistance. Haunani-Kay Trask (1991) writes about the importance of the past to Indigenous peoples ...
... is often said that globalization is the new word for imperialism. History and context are crucial for anti-colonial undertakings. Understanding our collective past is significant for pursuing political resistance. Haunani-Kay Trask (1991) writes about the importance of the past to Indigenous peoples ...
Post-DeveloPment theory anD the Discourse-agency
... focusing on non-elites, with an aim to study history from below. Additionally, and perhaps more directly, it is a result of both general postmodern trends within the social sciences and the impasse of development after a half-century of flawed interventions (cf. Escobar 2007; Ziai 2007). The latter ...
... focusing on non-elites, with an aim to study history from below. Additionally, and perhaps more directly, it is a result of both general postmodern trends within the social sciences and the impasse of development after a half-century of flawed interventions (cf. Escobar 2007; Ziai 2007). The latter ...