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... Finally, social simulation could help to test policy scenarios to maximise the efficacy and efficiency of various peer review schemes under specific circumstances and for everyone involved. For instance, it is reasonable to suppose that journal editors, authors and reviewers have conflicting interests. ...
... Finally, social simulation could help to test policy scenarios to maximise the efficacy and efficiency of various peer review schemes under specific circumstances and for everyone involved. For instance, it is reasonable to suppose that journal editors, authors and reviewers have conflicting interests. ...
The rationalization of rural life
... What is shared by both authors is the general idea that agriculture and the rural world should be seen as elements within capitalist development. Part of the fragility of these theses resides in the fact that they relate much more to the political clashes and dilemmas that had to be theoretically fo ...
... What is shared by both authors is the general idea that agriculture and the rural world should be seen as elements within capitalist development. Part of the fragility of these theses resides in the fact that they relate much more to the political clashes and dilemmas that had to be theoretically fo ...
The determinants of health: structure, context and agency
... structure, the distribution of resources, and the uses of political, economic and social power influence health and illness and society’s response to health and illness (1986: 2). Social structure, therefore, is invoked to make a specifically sociological claim about how things need to be conceptual ...
... structure, the distribution of resources, and the uses of political, economic and social power influence health and illness and society’s response to health and illness (1986: 2). Social structure, therefore, is invoked to make a specifically sociological claim about how things need to be conceptual ...
Discourse Studies
... Lakoff and Johnson’s Metaphors We Live By (1980) is an example. This was a genuinely innovative work whose insights have contributed greatly to a critical understanding of contemporary ideology. In discussing the nature of metaphors, Lakoff and Johnson continually used the concept of ‘experience’: ‘ ...
... Lakoff and Johnson’s Metaphors We Live By (1980) is an example. This was a genuinely innovative work whose insights have contributed greatly to a critical understanding of contemporary ideology. In discussing the nature of metaphors, Lakoff and Johnson continually used the concept of ‘experience’: ‘ ...
For a Relational Musicology - American Musicological Society
... Michel Serres, who, extending the spatial metaphors, portrays the evolution of modern knowledge as a process of ever greater specialization ‘more divisions and separations developing into [ . . .] territories, disciplines and branches of knowledge’.14 Serres connects this to the move beyond a naiv ...
... Michel Serres, who, extending the spatial metaphors, portrays the evolution of modern knowledge as a process of ever greater specialization ‘more divisions and separations developing into [ . . .] territories, disciplines and branches of knowledge’.14 Serres connects this to the move beyond a naiv ...
Readings on Social Movements
... the case of what Aberle calls redemptive movements. These movements also focus on individuals as the object of change or control, but they seek total rather than partial change. From the vantage point of these movements, social ills and problems of all varieties are seen as rooted in individuals and ...
... the case of what Aberle calls redemptive movements. These movements also focus on individuals as the object of change or control, but they seek total rather than partial change. From the vantage point of these movements, social ills and problems of all varieties are seen as rooted in individuals and ...
Testing Searle`s Argument against Laws in the Social Sciences
... Later, they (Butchard / D'Amico 2012: 448)2 further explain that they do believe that the attitudes taken towards a phenomenon are underwritten by brain states. If the attitude changes, the phenomena would also change and some particular instance of money would cease to exist. With reference to brai ...
... Later, they (Butchard / D'Amico 2012: 448)2 further explain that they do believe that the attitudes taken towards a phenomenon are underwritten by brain states. If the attitude changes, the phenomena would also change and some particular instance of money would cease to exist. With reference to brai ...