Norms in Law and Society: Towards a Definition of
... a position that leads away from the study of human beings as mental igures. ‘Social phenomena must therefore be considered in themselves, detached from the conscious beings who form their own mental representations of them. They must be studied from the outside, as external things, because it is in ...
... a position that leads away from the study of human beings as mental igures. ‘Social phenomena must therefore be considered in themselves, detached from the conscious beings who form their own mental representations of them. They must be studied from the outside, as external things, because it is in ...
Social Psychology and Multiculturalism Verkuyten, Maykel
... between majority and minority groups. The endorsement of multiculturalism was associated with lesser evaluative bias for majority group participants than for ethnic minorities. Furthermore, in two studies in the Netherlands, it was found that the more strongly ethnic minority members endorsed the id ...
... between majority and minority groups. The endorsement of multiculturalism was associated with lesser evaluative bias for majority group participants than for ethnic minorities. Furthermore, in two studies in the Netherlands, it was found that the more strongly ethnic minority members endorsed the id ...
Mirror Neurons, Embodied Simulation, and the Neural Basis of
... Social identification can be articulated on many different levels of complexity. However, whatever this complexity might be, social identification is crucial to allow the sense of belonging to a larger community of other organisms. The hypothesis being proposed here is that social identification inc ...
... Social identification can be articulated on many different levels of complexity. However, whatever this complexity might be, social identification is crucial to allow the sense of belonging to a larger community of other organisms. The hypothesis being proposed here is that social identification inc ...
Student-Driven Test Questions Master List
... “naturally” ethnocentric? – Perry G. & Dr. V 32. Describe the difference values and goals. –Mary B. 33. Why is it hard for people to adopt/accept different values than their own? –Trisaunia A. Chapter 3 (Humans are Embedded) 34. On page 18 the text states, “In a very basic sense, we become human thr ...
... “naturally” ethnocentric? – Perry G. & Dr. V 32. Describe the difference values and goals. –Mary B. 33. Why is it hard for people to adopt/accept different values than their own? –Trisaunia A. Chapter 3 (Humans are Embedded) 34. On page 18 the text states, “In a very basic sense, we become human thr ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... radical critique. The following examples can illustrate this point. If we analyze the European colonial expansion from a Eurocentric point of view, what we get is a picture in which the origins of the so-called capitalist worldsystem are primarily produced by the inter-imperial competition among Eur ...
... radical critique. The following examples can illustrate this point. If we analyze the European colonial expansion from a Eurocentric point of view, what we get is a picture in which the origins of the so-called capitalist worldsystem are primarily produced by the inter-imperial competition among Eur ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... radical critique. The following examples can illustrate this point. If we analyze the European colonial expansion from a Eurocentric point of view, what we get is a picture in which the origins of the so-called capitalist worldsystem are primarily produced by the inter-imperial competition among Eur ...
... radical critique. The following examples can illustrate this point. If we analyze the European colonial expansion from a Eurocentric point of view, what we get is a picture in which the origins of the so-called capitalist worldsystem are primarily produced by the inter-imperial competition among Eur ...
Discourse and creativity - Reading`s CentAUR
... 1952 paper he proposes ‘discourse analysis’ as a means of addressing two inter-related problems, the first arising from the fact that most models of descriptive linguistics stop at the level of the sentence, and the second arising from the need to correlate ‘culture’ and language, that is, to unders ...
... 1952 paper he proposes ‘discourse analysis’ as a means of addressing two inter-related problems, the first arising from the fact that most models of descriptive linguistics stop at the level of the sentence, and the second arising from the need to correlate ‘culture’ and language, that is, to unders ...
CSGP 07/2 - Trent University
... multiple social inequalities. The problem is well known to Marxists and feminists who for decades have grappled with conceptualizing the intersection between class and gender. But the problem extends to other complex inequalities, such as those based on ethnicity, nation, and religion. While there i ...
... multiple social inequalities. The problem is well known to Marxists and feminists who for decades have grappled with conceptualizing the intersection between class and gender. But the problem extends to other complex inequalities, such as those based on ethnicity, nation, and religion. While there i ...
Social Capital and Conflict - Households in Conflict Network
... Unfortunately, as social capital has interested scientists from an array of disciplines, this has led to an emergence of many different interpretations of the topic. But researchers have still been able to show that social capital, however defined, has an impact on development outcomes (Colletta & ...
... Unfortunately, as social capital has interested scientists from an array of disciplines, this has led to an emergence of many different interpretations of the topic. But researchers have still been able to show that social capital, however defined, has an impact on development outcomes (Colletta & ...
Concept Analysis Diagram
... Interrelated Concepts are concepts which either affect or are affected by the Concept being defined in the diagram. Therefore the arrow between Interrelated and the defined Concept goes both ways. The Interrelated Concepts for the concept of Elimination might include Nutrition, Coping, Metabolism, M ...
... Interrelated Concepts are concepts which either affect or are affected by the Concept being defined in the diagram. Therefore the arrow between Interrelated and the defined Concept goes both ways. The Interrelated Concepts for the concept of Elimination might include Nutrition, Coping, Metabolism, M ...
Transatlantic issues in social pedagogy: What the United
... of the 18th and 19th centuries. Under the title ‘The rest of Europe values pedagogy,’ Boddy & Statham (2010) referred to their recent Nuffield briefing paper, drawing on two cross-European studies, and remarked that they had found practice teams, elsewhere in Europe, to be multi-professional: Social ...
... of the 18th and 19th centuries. Under the title ‘The rest of Europe values pedagogy,’ Boddy & Statham (2010) referred to their recent Nuffield briefing paper, drawing on two cross-European studies, and remarked that they had found practice teams, elsewhere in Europe, to be multi-professional: Social ...
PDF
... to fit into a specific social context with a specific organisation of social relations and specific norms and values and accepted behaviour patterns. Businesses recognise the sociocultural nature of innovations and take variation in taste into account when introducing new products or processes. Here ...
... to fit into a specific social context with a specific organisation of social relations and specific norms and values and accepted behaviour patterns. Businesses recognise the sociocultural nature of innovations and take variation in taste into account when introducing new products or processes. Here ...
FV Slaby, Haueis, and Choudhury for Routledge - PH
... “daydreamers” etc.), are crucially fed by several meta-narratives or background stories such as evolutionary theory (Young, in press), forms of materialism or determinism, and are regularly endowed with an apparently robust, often tacitly normative, authority (Hartmann, in press).2 In this way, neur ...
... “daydreamers” etc.), are crucially fed by several meta-narratives or background stories such as evolutionary theory (Young, in press), forms of materialism or determinism, and are regularly endowed with an apparently robust, often tacitly normative, authority (Hartmann, in press).2 In this way, neur ...
1 The Future in Max Weber`s Methodological Writings Barbara Adam
... Despite Weber’s extensive methodological considerations and innovations, however, the contradictions and dilemmas remained. It is in his engagement with those dilemmas that we find some of his most interesting, hotly debated and often misunderstood writing. It is here that we discover valuable insig ...
... Despite Weber’s extensive methodological considerations and innovations, however, the contradictions and dilemmas remained. It is in his engagement with those dilemmas that we find some of his most interesting, hotly debated and often misunderstood writing. It is here that we discover valuable insig ...
Federalism and Its Discontents - Foundation for Law, Justice and
... dividends, but there is an assumption behind this that requires some unpacking. Calls for more applied research assume that the insights of analytical social science automatically deliver on real-life political puzzles as well. However, this is not as straightforward as it may seem to some. First of ...
... dividends, but there is an assumption behind this that requires some unpacking. Calls for more applied research assume that the insights of analytical social science automatically deliver on real-life political puzzles as well. However, this is not as straightforward as it may seem to some. First of ...
Notes on Hegel`s Conception of Reconciliation
... human beings in the economic sphere, and what Hegel calls the ‘abstraction of modern labor – in particular for Hegel its dissection and multiplication into specialized tasks, but also, one may add, the essential impersonality of modern production oriented towards the needs of nameless consumers.8 3. ...
... human beings in the economic sphere, and what Hegel calls the ‘abstraction of modern labor – in particular for Hegel its dissection and multiplication into specialized tasks, but also, one may add, the essential impersonality of modern production oriented towards the needs of nameless consumers.8 3. ...
Document
... definition appears to provide a clear way to identify social innovations. However, upon closer examination, it is both too narrow and too broad. First, by requiring a collaborative dimension to the innovation process, it excludes many innovations that could have very positive social impacts solely ...
... definition appears to provide a clear way to identify social innovations. However, upon closer examination, it is both too narrow and too broad. First, by requiring a collaborative dimension to the innovation process, it excludes many innovations that could have very positive social impacts solely ...
Social change and progress in the sociology of Robert Nisbet
... pattern of growth through which everything that exists in the universe moves towards the fulfilment of its intrinsic ends. To the extent that the Greeks distinguished at all between a natural and a social domain as two separate ontological realms, their way of drawing that distinction was of course ...
... pattern of growth through which everything that exists in the universe moves towards the fulfilment of its intrinsic ends. To the extent that the Greeks distinguished at all between a natural and a social domain as two separate ontological realms, their way of drawing that distinction was of course ...
The rationalization of rural life
... Another problem lies in the historical limits of these same theories. What neither these authors, nor their main source of inspiration, Karl Marx, could have foreseen was that the reality of the advanced capitalist countries, without mentioning, therefore, globally peripheral formations, would provi ...
... Another problem lies in the historical limits of these same theories. What neither these authors, nor their main source of inspiration, Karl Marx, could have foreseen was that the reality of the advanced capitalist countries, without mentioning, therefore, globally peripheral formations, would provi ...
Travel and Home: Conceiving Transnational Communities through
... The paradox of the individual emerges for Royce in ethical situations because, on the one hand, “I and only I, whenever I come to my own, can morally justify to myself my own life plan. No outer authority can ever give me the true reason for my duty” (1995, 16). In forming one’s life’s plans, choice ...
... The paradox of the individual emerges for Royce in ethical situations because, on the one hand, “I and only I, whenever I come to my own, can morally justify to myself my own life plan. No outer authority can ever give me the true reason for my duty” (1995, 16). In forming one’s life’s plans, choice ...
The Quest for a Universal Social Work: Some Issues and Implications
... developing local models of social work education and practice (Cossom, 1990), some have suggested social development as an alternative, as the case of South Africa shows (Gray & Mazibuko, 2002; Midgley, 1995). Some draw attention to unifying values, such as empowerment, justice, human rights, and eq ...
... developing local models of social work education and practice (Cossom, 1990), some have suggested social development as an alternative, as the case of South Africa shows (Gray & Mazibuko, 2002; Midgley, 1995). Some draw attention to unifying values, such as empowerment, justice, human rights, and eq ...
Social, Societal, Social Work and Psychological as Understood by
... Payne 2005). That is why a phenomena-based orientation needs good theoretical arguments. However, adopting a phenomena-based orientation does not mean devaluing a contextual orientation. As an example, our above-mentioned three studies were realized in contextual frame. A phenomena-based orientation ...
... Payne 2005). That is why a phenomena-based orientation needs good theoretical arguments. However, adopting a phenomena-based orientation does not mean devaluing a contextual orientation. As an example, our above-mentioned three studies were realized in contextual frame. A phenomena-based orientation ...
Workforce Diveristy Management
... • The changes taking place in all sectors of twenty-first century society are unprecedented. There are vast changes taking place in the political, religious, economic, social, and cultural arenas that are direct and indirect results of the need for diversity and universal perspectives in responding ...
... • The changes taking place in all sectors of twenty-first century society are unprecedented. There are vast changes taking place in the political, religious, economic, social, and cultural arenas that are direct and indirect results of the need for diversity and universal perspectives in responding ...
Aalborg Universitet Representations from the past Sammut, Gordon; Tsirogianni, Stavroula; Wagoner, Brady
... This notion clearly parallels Moscovici’s (2000) description of social representations as composed of figure and symbol, corresponding to the processes of ‘objectification’ and ‘anchoring’ respectively. In relation to the first process, Halbwachs discusses how families develop distinctive ways of ta ...
... This notion clearly parallels Moscovici’s (2000) description of social representations as composed of figure and symbol, corresponding to the processes of ‘objectification’ and ‘anchoring’ respectively. In relation to the first process, Halbwachs discusses how families develop distinctive ways of ta ...
Chapter One: Introduction
... Finally, chapter 7 addresses the second kind of epistemic injustice that I want to explore: hermeneutical injustice. A central case of this sort of injustice is found in the example of a woman who suffers sexual harassment prior to the time when we had this critical concept, so that she cannot prop ...
... Finally, chapter 7 addresses the second kind of epistemic injustice that I want to explore: hermeneutical injustice. A central case of this sort of injustice is found in the example of a woman who suffers sexual harassment prior to the time when we had this critical concept, so that she cannot prop ...