The Social experience
... customers is fundamentally changing. And we see a huge opportunity for brands to create social experiences that are useful, unique, fun, touching, or otherwise meaningful, because we believe the sum of these individual social interactions is greater than its parts. It’s about better relationships—mo ...
... customers is fundamentally changing. And we see a huge opportunity for brands to create social experiences that are useful, unique, fun, touching, or otherwise meaningful, because we believe the sum of these individual social interactions is greater than its parts. It’s about better relationships—mo ...
A difficult business: finding the evidence for social science reviews Lesley Grayson
... experience of evidence based medicine to develop a more rigorous approach that includes thorough searching for literature on the defined topic. This paper focuses on searching, identifying some key differences between the social sciences and medicine, namely: a more diverse literature; the greater v ...
... experience of evidence based medicine to develop a more rigorous approach that includes thorough searching for literature on the defined topic. This paper focuses on searching, identifying some key differences between the social sciences and medicine, namely: a more diverse literature; the greater v ...
Futures Studies in the Field of the Environment
... for the systematic analysis of how societies think, project and create futures and how prevailing future notions in science are linked to ideas of ethics, responsibility and action. Such notions of human responsibility were indeed key in the emergence of ideas of the long term as something that had ...
... for the systematic analysis of how societies think, project and create futures and how prevailing future notions in science are linked to ideas of ethics, responsibility and action. Such notions of human responsibility were indeed key in the emergence of ideas of the long term as something that had ...
Developing and sustaining mixed tenure housing developments
... of deprivation and help address social exclusion and community cohesion. (Housing Corporation, 2006, p.9) In 2006 more detailed guidance was issued to local planning authorities in PPS3 (CLG, 2006a). This requires local authorities to assess the housing needs in their area, set clear targets, ensure ...
... of deprivation and help address social exclusion and community cohesion. (Housing Corporation, 2006, p.9) In 2006 more detailed guidance was issued to local planning authorities in PPS3 (CLG, 2006a). This requires local authorities to assess the housing needs in their area, set clear targets, ensure ...
Driving Curiosity in Search with Large
... spare time. Searching for fun or having fun while searching involves activities such as online shopping with nothing to buy, reading online, watching funny videos or finding funny pictures. Serendipity (a discovery of something new and interesting) has been an important consideration for recommender ...
... spare time. Searching for fun or having fun while searching involves activities such as online shopping with nothing to buy, reading online, watching funny videos or finding funny pictures. Serendipity (a discovery of something new and interesting) has been an important consideration for recommender ...
Ethics without guarantees - HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
... methods of other fields—but we shouldn’t dismiss them out of hand either, which can be just as naive. The critiques of psychology coming from anthropology, critical theory, cultural studies, and STS are well known by now—no one needs me to repeat them. Instead, Ethical life attempts to give a readin ...
... methods of other fields—but we shouldn’t dismiss them out of hand either, which can be just as naive. The critiques of psychology coming from anthropology, critical theory, cultural studies, and STS are well known by now—no one needs me to repeat them. Instead, Ethical life attempts to give a readin ...
Ascetic - SummitMSELA
... own importance is an … Another words for unselfish is … One who considers himself to be the center of the universe is … Another word for a choice is … The action of substituting for another is to … ...
... own importance is an … Another words for unselfish is … One who considers himself to be the center of the universe is … Another word for a choice is … The action of substituting for another is to … ...
Five Faces of Oppression
... between social collectivities that experience some differences in their way of life and forms of association, even if they also regard themselves as belonging to the same society. As long as they associated solely among themselves, for example, an American Indian group thought of themselves only as ...
... between social collectivities that experience some differences in their way of life and forms of association, even if they also regard themselves as belonging to the same society. As long as they associated solely among themselves, for example, an American Indian group thought of themselves only as ...
Introduction to the themed issue. Corporate power: Agency
... of these are perennially at or about the summit of the power structure, able to drive initiatives and head off threats, while others are formed for specific purposes and are then consigned to the margins once their job is done. Briefly outlined, there are a number of varying formations created by co ...
... of these are perennially at or about the summit of the power structure, able to drive initiatives and head off threats, while others are formed for specific purposes and are then consigned to the margins once their job is done. Briefly outlined, there are a number of varying formations created by co ...
Line Grenier FROM `DIVERSITY` TO `DIFFERENCE`
... musical studies. Over the last twenty-five years or so, the scope of the field has widened tremendously as researchers from various disciplines (mass communication, anthropology, sociology, film studies, ethnomusicology, etc.) have got involved. It is now a highly diversified area of research whose ...
... musical studies. Over the last twenty-five years or so, the scope of the field has widened tremendously as researchers from various disciplines (mass communication, anthropology, sociology, film studies, ethnomusicology, etc.) have got involved. It is now a highly diversified area of research whose ...
Co-creating a SOCIAL INNOVATION RESEARCH AGENDA for Europe
... Looking at projects funded under EU calls Horizon 2020, FP7 (those that were not yet included in the project review produced within the framework of the WILCO project, FP5-7 – recommendations from this review below as the basis to analyse development and new research challenges). A number of project ...
... Looking at projects funded under EU calls Horizon 2020, FP7 (those that were not yet included in the project review produced within the framework of the WILCO project, FP5-7 – recommendations from this review below as the basis to analyse development and new research challenges). A number of project ...
Building Social Work Knowledge: Some Issues
... practice. This, to a large extent, made the profession have a bias toward micro, rather than macro, tools for analysis and intervention. Most often the approach of social workers, with regard to the borrowing from psychology, lead to the criticism that 'social workers treat the discipline of psychol ...
... practice. This, to a large extent, made the profession have a bias toward micro, rather than macro, tools for analysis and intervention. Most often the approach of social workers, with regard to the borrowing from psychology, lead to the criticism that 'social workers treat the discipline of psychol ...
Folksonomy - Columbia University
... terminological consensus • Collective action yields common terms • Stabilization may be caused by imitation and shared knowledge • The wisdom of the crowd ...
... terminological consensus • Collective action yields common terms • Stabilization may be caused by imitation and shared knowledge • The wisdom of the crowd ...
Thick Description
... surroundings as well as the actions and utterances of the other members of their society The second major premise is that actions are guided by interpretation. ...
... surroundings as well as the actions and utterances of the other members of their society The second major premise is that actions are guided by interpretation. ...
Network Approaches to Global Civil Society
... between individuals, groups and organisations. Network analysis is a highly technical field, yet has retained a very straightforward basic intellectual thrust, with three major approaches that take different, though complementary, paths: • a micro-level view that looks at ego-centered networks and f ...
... between individuals, groups and organisations. Network analysis is a highly technical field, yet has retained a very straightforward basic intellectual thrust, with three major approaches that take different, though complementary, paths: • a micro-level view that looks at ego-centered networks and f ...
Study guide for test 3- Anth1000c- Fall 2003
... In a patrilineal kinship system, a married couple is most likely to reside a. with or near the parents of the bride. b. with or near the parents of the groom. c. with or near the bride's mother's brother. d. alternating between the bride's family and the groom's family. e. with the bride's family fo ...
... In a patrilineal kinship system, a married couple is most likely to reside a. with or near the parents of the bride. b. with or near the parents of the groom. c. with or near the bride's mother's brother. d. alternating between the bride's family and the groom's family. e. with the bride's family fo ...
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH AND SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
... territory and interacting with them in their own language, on their own terms. As identified mainly with sociology, cultural anthropology and political science, qualitative research has been seen to be “naturalistic”, “ethnographic” and “participatory.” However, Kirk and Miller did not address the ...
... territory and interacting with them in their own language, on their own terms. As identified mainly with sociology, cultural anthropology and political science, qualitative research has been seen to be “naturalistic”, “ethnographic” and “participatory.” However, Kirk and Miller did not address the ...
PDF - ProtoSociology
... to be understood as a unique evolutionary direction which leads to a modern cultural and societal innovation. This process is characterized by a long lasting structural tendency. Classical sociology has systematized this structural change as a differentiation of action systems, structural differenti ...
... to be understood as a unique evolutionary direction which leads to a modern cultural and societal innovation. This process is characterized by a long lasting structural tendency. Classical sociology has systematized this structural change as a differentiation of action systems, structural differenti ...
BA in Anthropology
... Why study anthropology? Through the study of culture, anthropology offers students a set of tools and skills that help make sense of how human difference across both time and space is simultaneously preserved and threatened within an increasingly interconnected and globalized world. Archaeological a ...
... Why study anthropology? Through the study of culture, anthropology offers students a set of tools and skills that help make sense of how human difference across both time and space is simultaneously preserved and threatened within an increasingly interconnected and globalized world. Archaeological a ...
Consensus, Community, and Exoticism
... However, the early attempts to import the family reconstitution methods of the Annales and Cambridge schools and combine them with concepts from social anthropology have resulted in a misapplication of these concepts. For example, Lockridge, in his book on Dedham, Massachusetts, considers the villag ...
... However, the early attempts to import the family reconstitution methods of the Annales and Cambridge schools and combine them with concepts from social anthropology have resulted in a misapplication of these concepts. For example, Lockridge, in his book on Dedham, Massachusetts, considers the villag ...
Social Work in Europe - University of Ostrava
... phenomenological position, the apparently major country-specific differences almost totally prevent the assumption that there might also be some similarities. Regarding, for example, the status and duties of the social workers (with masters degrees) in Finland, then the French, German or French work ...
... phenomenological position, the apparently major country-specific differences almost totally prevent the assumption that there might also be some similarities. Regarding, for example, the status and duties of the social workers (with masters degrees) in Finland, then the French, German or French work ...
Critical Realism in Information Systems Research
... science, the fact that knowledge is always historically and socially located, without losing the ontological dimension. We should also note that such epistemic relativity does not imply a corresponding judgmental relativity (i.e., that all views are equally valid and that there are no rational groun ...
... science, the fact that knowledge is always historically and socially located, without losing the ontological dimension. We should also note that such epistemic relativity does not imply a corresponding judgmental relativity (i.e., that all views are equally valid and that there are no rational groun ...
6. Words as Moral Badges. A Continuous Flow of Buzzwords in
... all political rhetoric, they are abstract in the sense that they allow for extended interpretation and multi-layered references, based on the need for enrolling large support by linking specific issues to encompassing programmes. Arguments about their vagueness or difficulties of definition are com ...
... all political rhetoric, they are abstract in the sense that they allow for extended interpretation and multi-layered references, based on the need for enrolling large support by linking specific issues to encompassing programmes. Arguments about their vagueness or difficulties of definition are com ...
[cognitive formats] in
... fueled John Rawls’ theory of justice and Jürgen Habermas’ theory of communicative action (Boltanski and Thévenot 2000). And because it deals with plural orders of worth, our undertaking is in line with authors who identify different orders of systematic coherence in social life (Weber, Parsons, Luhm ...
... fueled John Rawls’ theory of justice and Jürgen Habermas’ theory of communicative action (Boltanski and Thévenot 2000). And because it deals with plural orders of worth, our undertaking is in line with authors who identify different orders of systematic coherence in social life (Weber, Parsons, Luhm ...
Group-In-a-Box Layout for Multi-faceted Analysis of Communities
... One particularly important aspect of social network analysis is the detection of communities, i.e., sub-groups of individuals or entities that exhibit tight interconnectivity among the wider population. For example, Twitter users who regularly retweet each other’s messages may form cohesive groups w ...
... One particularly important aspect of social network analysis is the detection of communities, i.e., sub-groups of individuals or entities that exhibit tight interconnectivity among the wider population. For example, Twitter users who regularly retweet each other’s messages may form cohesive groups w ...
Tribe (Internet)
The term tribe or digital tribe is used as a slang term for an unofficial community of people who share a common interest, and usually who are loosely affiliated with each other through social media or other internet mechanisms. The term is related to ""tribe,"" which traditionally refers to people closely associated in both geography and genealogy.The concept is closely related to social networking, and dates back to at least 2003, when tribe.net was launched. Cory Doctorow wrote a science fiction novel that expounds on this concept released in 2004 called Eastern Standard Tribe.