Paper-1, COMPARATIVE POLITICS
... ideas, persons, interests and demands. The study of politics is concerned with the description and analysis of the manner in which power is obtained, exercised and controlled, the purpose for which it is used, the manner in which decisions are made, the factors which influence the making of those de ...
... ideas, persons, interests and demands. The study of politics is concerned with the description and analysis of the manner in which power is obtained, exercised and controlled, the purpose for which it is used, the manner in which decisions are made, the factors which influence the making of those de ...
THE FOUCAULT EFFECT
... Foucault introduced his lectures on governmentality as being, among other things, an answer to the first of these objections. The same style of analysis, he argued, that had been used to study techniques and practices addressed to individual human subjects within particular, local institu tions cou ...
... Foucault introduced his lectures on governmentality as being, among other things, an answer to the first of these objections. The same style of analysis, he argued, that had been used to study techniques and practices addressed to individual human subjects within particular, local institu tions cou ...
David Riesman, Alexis de Tocqueville and History: A Look at The
... building were other industries which formed the backbone of the medieval economy and required a sophisticated technology. Finally, the view of the Middle Ages as a rigidly conformist society has been demolished by the work of numerous scholars. Jeffrey Burton Russell, in an impressive number of book ...
... building were other industries which formed the backbone of the medieval economy and required a sophisticated technology. Finally, the view of the Middle Ages as a rigidly conformist society has been demolished by the work of numerous scholars. Jeffrey Burton Russell, in an impressive number of book ...
Prentice Hall Magruder`s American Government © 2005 Correlated
... Transparencies; Social Studies Tutor CDROM; Simulations and Data Graphing CDROM; Interactive Constitution CD-ROM; Teacher EXPRESS CD-ROM; American Government Video Collection: Congress at Work: An Inside Look, In Committee: How a Bill Becomes a Law, Getting the Job Done: The Senator’s Staff, Preside ...
... Transparencies; Social Studies Tutor CDROM; Simulations and Data Graphing CDROM; Interactive Constitution CD-ROM; Teacher EXPRESS CD-ROM; American Government Video Collection: Congress at Work: An Inside Look, In Committee: How a Bill Becomes a Law, Getting the Job Done: The Senator’s Staff, Preside ...
Practice Theory - WesScholar
... Turner draws their boundaries even more widely, claiming that “a large family of terms [are] used interchangeably with ‘practices’, among them. . . some of the most widely used terms in philosophy and the humanities such as tradition, tacit knowledge, Weltanschauung, paradigm, ideology, framework, a ...
... Turner draws their boundaries even more widely, claiming that “a large family of terms [are] used interchangeably with ‘practices’, among them. . . some of the most widely used terms in philosophy and the humanities such as tradition, tacit knowledge, Weltanschauung, paradigm, ideology, framework, a ...
Student Affairs - The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy
... The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union Introduction to Eastern Europe since World War II Introduction to Peace Studies Introduction to American Politics Introduction to Politics Introduction to Comparative Politics American Foreign Policy Contemporary Issues in American Politics Introduction to Polit ...
... The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union Introduction to Eastern Europe since World War II Introduction to Peace Studies Introduction to American Politics Introduction to Politics Introduction to Comparative Politics American Foreign Policy Contemporary Issues in American Politics Introduction to Polit ...
The consolations of`neoliberalism`
... might seem. They imply different models of the nature of explanatory concepts; different models of causality and determination; different models of social relations and agency; and different normative understandings of political power. We should not finesse these differences away by presuming that t ...
... might seem. They imply different models of the nature of explanatory concepts; different models of causality and determination; different models of social relations and agency; and different normative understandings of political power. We should not finesse these differences away by presuming that t ...
practice theory
... Turner draws their boundaries even more widely, claiming that “a large family of terms [are] used interchangeably with ‘practices’, among them. . . some of the most widely used terms in philosophy and the humanities such as tradition, tacit knowledge, Weltanschauung, paradigm, ideology, framework, a ...
... Turner draws their boundaries even more widely, claiming that “a large family of terms [are] used interchangeably with ‘practices’, among them. . . some of the most widely used terms in philosophy and the humanities such as tradition, tacit knowledge, Weltanschauung, paradigm, ideology, framework, a ...
History Department Course Offerings Winter 2014-15
... the emergence of the modern secular state. You will learn why Absolutism did not work very well and how the Enlightenment marked the birth of modern humanitarian values. Writing assignments will develop your ability to analyze primary sources and evaluate secondary sources. _________________________ ...
... the emergence of the modern secular state. You will learn why Absolutism did not work very well and how the Enlightenment marked the birth of modern humanitarian values. Writing assignments will develop your ability to analyze primary sources and evaluate secondary sources. _________________________ ...
Ideological systems and its validation: a neutrosophic approach University of New Mexico
... concrete individuals as subjects (Althusser, [3]). Conventional conceptions of author (authority, originator) and individual agent are replaced by the ideologically constituted actor subject. Stereotypes, that actor subject rely on to understand and respond to events. As much if the Philosophy, Poli ...
... concrete individuals as subjects (Althusser, [3]). Conventional conceptions of author (authority, originator) and individual agent are replaced by the ideologically constituted actor subject. Stereotypes, that actor subject rely on to understand and respond to events. As much if the Philosophy, Poli ...
Ancient World History: Patterns of Interaction © 2012 Correlation to
... arguments and informative/explanatory texts. In history, students must be able to incorporate narrative accounts into their analyses of individuals or events of historical import. Standards ...
... arguments and informative/explanatory texts. In history, students must be able to incorporate narrative accounts into their analyses of individuals or events of historical import. Standards ...
Erving Goffman and advertising
... way that anticipates and is already adapted to the variety of readings it will be subject to.” (Ytreberg, 2002, p. 486). In the same way as individuals try to interact in a manner appropriate to the arena in which interactions are disseminated so must mass communications such as advertising. However ...
... way that anticipates and is already adapted to the variety of readings it will be subject to.” (Ytreberg, 2002, p. 486). In the same way as individuals try to interact in a manner appropriate to the arena in which interactions are disseminated so must mass communications such as advertising. However ...
Human-computer interaction and sociological insight
... group ends nearly 40% higher. ......................................................................................103 Table 6 The experimental group starts out with just under 20% higher affinity, due to the increased conversations occurring due to ConvoCons. Affinity continues to grow for the exp ...
... group ends nearly 40% higher. ......................................................................................103 Table 6 The experimental group starts out with just under 20% higher affinity, due to the increased conversations occurring due to ConvoCons. Affinity continues to grow for the exp ...
why we fell - Center for Cultural Sociology
... Greek authors generally rued the loss of morals in their contemporaries but did not construct comprehensive analyses of their city-states’ decline, (with the possible exception of Aristotle, who analyzed Sparta’s decline mainly through her politics [Cawkwell 1983]). Our goal is to trace the paths a ...
... Greek authors generally rued the loss of morals in their contemporaries but did not construct comprehensive analyses of their city-states’ decline, (with the possible exception of Aristotle, who analyzed Sparta’s decline mainly through her politics [Cawkwell 1983]). Our goal is to trace the paths a ...
Honneth and Care-work
... position or birthright no longer has any bearing on the distribution of justice. Therefore the recognition of rights is not reflected through the person’s attributes but rather as an acknowledgement that the individual is a source of independent judgement, “she or he can enter contracts, has the ab ...
... position or birthright no longer has any bearing on the distribution of justice. Therefore the recognition of rights is not reflected through the person’s attributes but rather as an acknowledgement that the individual is a source of independent judgement, “she or he can enter contracts, has the ab ...
Prentice Hall World History
... World History and Geography: The Industrial Revolution to the Contemporary World Course Description: Students will study the rise of the nation state in Europe, the French Revolution, and the economic and political roots of the modern world. They will examine the origins and consequences of the Indu ...
... World History and Geography: The Industrial Revolution to the Contemporary World Course Description: Students will study the rise of the nation state in Europe, the French Revolution, and the economic and political roots of the modern world. They will examine the origins and consequences of the Indu ...
World History: Connections to Today, Survey Edition
... Prentice Hall: World History: Connections to Today, Survey Edition 2003 Correlated to New York Social Studies Core Curriculum, Global History and Geography, Commencement, (Grades 9-12) NY SOCIAL STUDIES CORE CURRICULUM, GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY ...
... Prentice Hall: World History: Connections to Today, Survey Edition 2003 Correlated to New York Social Studies Core Curriculum, Global History and Geography, Commencement, (Grades 9-12) NY SOCIAL STUDIES CORE CURRICULUM, GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY ...
Herbert Spencer Energetics
... would seem to be no reason for being interested in Spencer’s ideas after Durkheim has finished with them’ (Durkheim, 1933: x). Durkheim’s critiques address what is, in fact, a fairly limited dimension of Spencer’s work, and in fact Durkheim’s own arguments are much closer to Spencer than one can ea ...
... would seem to be no reason for being interested in Spencer’s ideas after Durkheim has finished with them’ (Durkheim, 1933: x). Durkheim’s critiques address what is, in fact, a fairly limited dimension of Spencer’s work, and in fact Durkheim’s own arguments are much closer to Spencer than one can ea ...
American History "I Can" Checklist
... I can describe actions taken against perceived threats during the Red Scare. ...
... I can describe actions taken against perceived threats during the Red Scare. ...
Individual Rights and the Social Good: A Choice
... In the preface to Anarchy, State, and Utopia,4 Robert Nozick has made an even stronger statement: Individuals have rights, and there are things no person or group may do to them (without violating their rights). So strong and farreaching are these rights that they raise the question of what, if anyt ...
... In the preface to Anarchy, State, and Utopia,4 Robert Nozick has made an even stronger statement: Individuals have rights, and there are things no person or group may do to them (without violating their rights). So strong and farreaching are these rights that they raise the question of what, if anyt ...
Continuity, Change and the Circulation of Social Practices
... times, the coast of the Gulf of Mexico linked central Mexico to the Caribbean and the Iberian Peninsula. The maritime routes that linked the Carrera de Indias constituted a complex infrastructure that connected the colonial centres in Spain to the Americas. The Caribbean constituted the junction of ...
... times, the coast of the Gulf of Mexico linked central Mexico to the Caribbean and the Iberian Peninsula. The maritime routes that linked the Carrera de Indias constituted a complex infrastructure that connected the colonial centres in Spain to the Americas. The Caribbean constituted the junction of ...
this article - International Journal of Mass Emergencies
... The importance of history is also strongly present in what has been termed the Access Model of disaster causation proposed by Amartya Sen in Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation (1981). Here vulnerability is regarded as generated by the difficulties some social groups or fami ...
... The importance of history is also strongly present in what has been termed the Access Model of disaster causation proposed by Amartya Sen in Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation (1981). Here vulnerability is regarded as generated by the difficulties some social groups or fami ...
Unit Timeline: (4.5 weeks) - Kansas City Public Schools
... 12. Analyze how the industrialized powers divided up Asia and the Pacific, and how colonized people reacted. 13. Describe how the British colonies of Canada, Australia and New Zealand were settled, and how they won self-rule. 14. Describe the political problems faced by Mexico and other new Latin Am ...
... 12. Analyze how the industrialized powers divided up Asia and the Pacific, and how colonized people reacted. 13. Describe how the British colonies of Canada, Australia and New Zealand were settled, and how they won self-rule. 14. Describe the political problems faced by Mexico and other new Latin Am ...
Grade 6 - Freehold Borough School
... civilization through the end of the middle ages. They will start with two of the most important River Valley Civilizations and look at how agriculture caused early man to stop and stay in one place which enabled them to develop into a true civilization. A civilization has certain features that make ...
... civilization through the end of the middle ages. They will start with two of the most important River Valley Civilizations and look at how agriculture caused early man to stop and stay in one place which enabled them to develop into a true civilization. A civilization has certain features that make ...