![Trust, Social Networks and the Informal Economy: A Comparative](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/009471496_1-cf02625b1280bebc54b085de70756eba-300x300.png)
Trust, Social Networks and the Informal Economy: A Comparative
... item of personal information of an intimate character, thus implying confidence in the discretion and friendly disposition of the other person. "Trust then, is a relational response, not a result of blind loyalty, that permits people to take risks in dealing with each other” (Rose-Akerman 2001: 543) ...
... item of personal information of an intimate character, thus implying confidence in the discretion and friendly disposition of the other person. "Trust then, is a relational response, not a result of blind loyalty, that permits people to take risks in dealing with each other” (Rose-Akerman 2001: 543) ...
Digital Methods for Web Research
... a site of study, and data collection realm. When surveying, the question is how to find the respondents, and whether one knows (for example) the number of subscribers to a particular mailing list (and thus a response rate). For sampling, similarly, there are questions about whether one can estimate ...
... a site of study, and data collection realm. When surveying, the question is how to find the respondents, and whether one knows (for example) the number of subscribers to a particular mailing list (and thus a response rate). For sampling, similarly, there are questions about whether one can estimate ...
2014 Annual Lord Patten Lecture on Social Renewal
... The phrase was first used by the German social scientist Max Weber in 1917. Social scientists take it to mean that we should be value free. Science as a vocation became the shibboleth of all the professionalising social sciences, endlessly quoted to reinforce our demand to be treated with the legiti ...
... The phrase was first used by the German social scientist Max Weber in 1917. Social scientists take it to mean that we should be value free. Science as a vocation became the shibboleth of all the professionalising social sciences, endlessly quoted to reinforce our demand to be treated with the legiti ...
Advanced Philosophy of Social Science
... A look at some of the main themes and issues in the unit. It is easy to suppose that science is like map-making. The world is as it is, independently of our beliefs, concepts and theories about it. We chart it by observation and induction. It includes humans and human societies, which, although comp ...
... A look at some of the main themes and issues in the unit. It is easy to suppose that science is like map-making. The world is as it is, independently of our beliefs, concepts and theories about it. We chart it by observation and induction. It includes humans and human societies, which, although comp ...
The Broadening and Mystified Margins of Urban Deprivation1
... at the same time, it isolates the problem from the wider, or ‘mainstream’, society that is assumed to be working properly and thus not responsible for producing socio-spatial deprivation (Préteceille, 2012). Spatializing the problem also means inviting solutions for the improvement of the space itse ...
... at the same time, it isolates the problem from the wider, or ‘mainstream’, society that is assumed to be working properly and thus not responsible for producing socio-spatial deprivation (Préteceille, 2012). Spatializing the problem also means inviting solutions for the improvement of the space itse ...
Measuring Social Capital in the United Kingdom
... Social participation. This is defined as involvement in, and volunteering for, organised groups. Some indicators are measuring sources of social capital (e.g. those related to the personal contacts and interactions that are made by meeting people through clubs, churches, organisations, etc). Others ...
... Social participation. This is defined as involvement in, and volunteering for, organised groups. Some indicators are measuring sources of social capital (e.g. those related to the personal contacts and interactions that are made by meeting people through clubs, churches, organisations, etc). Others ...
Mission-Oriented Legal Structure
... The Community Interest Company (CIC)5 legal form was established under the Companies Act of 2004 for social enterprises that use their profits and assets for public good. It was developed to recognize and promote entrepreneurship in the social economy while limiting an owners’ ability to benefit fr ...
... The Community Interest Company (CIC)5 legal form was established under the Companies Act of 2004 for social enterprises that use their profits and assets for public good. It was developed to recognize and promote entrepreneurship in the social economy while limiting an owners’ ability to benefit fr ...
Review Leviathans at the Gold Mine: Creating
... over the next several decades. Golub highlights the ways that “Eurochristian” (the term used throughout the book for expatriates) prospectors were incorporated into Ipili social and political networks. Unfortunately, chapter 2 is largely told via the experiences of the Eurochristians. Golub mentions ...
... over the next several decades. Golub highlights the ways that “Eurochristian” (the term used throughout the book for expatriates) prospectors were incorporated into Ipili social and political networks. Unfortunately, chapter 2 is largely told via the experiences of the Eurochristians. Golub mentions ...
The Role of Comparison Group Size in the Third
... Prior third-person effect research has demonstrated that the perceived discrepancy between the impact of media messages on one’s self and others is driven by a number of factors. For example, several studies have found that the size of the gap increases as the ‘others’ become more socially remote fro ...
... Prior third-person effect research has demonstrated that the perceived discrepancy between the impact of media messages on one’s self and others is driven by a number of factors. For example, several studies have found that the size of the gap increases as the ‘others’ become more socially remote fro ...
Time and space in cyber social reality
... processes of interactions on many levels. In analytical terms, this calls for openness to the actual inter-activity and a view on interaction not solely concerned with humans or face-to-face contact. An important aspect of social interaction (and thus, the construction of social reality) concerns so ...
... processes of interactions on many levels. In analytical terms, this calls for openness to the actual inter-activity and a view on interaction not solely concerned with humans or face-to-face contact. An important aspect of social interaction (and thus, the construction of social reality) concerns so ...
Social cohesion and subjective wellbeing
... Social cohesion is believed to be challenged: growing ethno-cultural diversity; a widening gap between rich and poor; technological changes; welfare state retrenchments; Euro-crisis.... A gap in the social reporting landscape (Legatum Prosperity Index 8 dimensions, social capital; Index of Socia ...
... Social cohesion is believed to be challenged: growing ethno-cultural diversity; a widening gap between rich and poor; technological changes; welfare state retrenchments; Euro-crisis.... A gap in the social reporting landscape (Legatum Prosperity Index 8 dimensions, social capital; Index of Socia ...
Social Exclusion and Ethnic Groups: The
... analysts one often finds the influence running in the opposite direction—from basic value commitments to conclusions about cause and effect. Conventional economic analysis has little to say about this kind of thing, starting as it does from the assumption that individual preferences among alternati ...
... analysts one often finds the influence running in the opposite direction—from basic value commitments to conclusions about cause and effect. Conventional economic analysis has little to say about this kind of thing, starting as it does from the assumption that individual preferences among alternati ...
Stefan Jarolimek (University of Leipzig)
... CSR communication can be defined as the communication from organizations itself or by journalism about events of organizations that are a) longer term measures (sustainable), b) voluntary (not legally bound). The actions/events reported have c) a clear connection to the organizations activities, but ...
... CSR communication can be defined as the communication from organizations itself or by journalism about events of organizations that are a) longer term measures (sustainable), b) voluntary (not legally bound). The actions/events reported have c) a clear connection to the organizations activities, but ...
doc[1] - WordPress.com
... attention on the more dispossessed social sectors, on those groups marginalized by society as well as by scientists (As for example, the community or the victims human rights violations2). Really they are psychologies that criticize but that hardly focus on themselves and their practices as the obje ...
... attention on the more dispossessed social sectors, on those groups marginalized by society as well as by scientists (As for example, the community or the victims human rights violations2). Really they are psychologies that criticize but that hardly focus on themselves and their practices as the obje ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
... Scientific research is practised by loosely organized groups of researchers and practitioners who share the same scientific speciality. These groups of scientists have been called scientific communities, invisible colleges, theory groups, networks and schools. Members of a particular scientific comm ...
... Scientific research is practised by loosely organized groups of researchers and practitioners who share the same scientific speciality. These groups of scientists have been called scientific communities, invisible colleges, theory groups, networks and schools. Members of a particular scientific comm ...
Representations, identity and resistance in communication
... “We cannot communicate unless we share certain representations” (Moscovici and Marková, 2000, p. 274). Representations sometimes call our very identities into question. We struggle over them because they matter – and these are contests from which serious consequences can flow. They define what is ‘n ...
... “We cannot communicate unless we share certain representations” (Moscovici and Marková, 2000, p. 274). Representations sometimes call our very identities into question. We struggle over them because they matter – and these are contests from which serious consequences can flow. They define what is ‘n ...
Policies - Frankston
... welcoming and inclusive environment for all throughout the Hockey community. FHC have appointed Stephen Blyth as our Inclusion Officer and he can be contacted by email Click Here for information on the role of the Inclusion Officer CHILD SAFETY POLICY AND CODE OF CONDUCT From 1 January 2017, the Chi ...
... welcoming and inclusive environment for all throughout the Hockey community. FHC have appointed Stephen Blyth as our Inclusion Officer and he can be contacted by email Click Here for information on the role of the Inclusion Officer CHILD SAFETY POLICY AND CODE OF CONDUCT From 1 January 2017, the Chi ...
Social Constructivism
... the system itself will change as well, because the system consists in thoughts and ideas. That is the insight behind the oft-repeated phrase by constructivist Alexander Wendt: ‘anarchy is what states make of it’ (1992). The claim sounds innocent but the potential consequences are far-reaching: sudde ...
... the system itself will change as well, because the system consists in thoughts and ideas. That is the insight behind the oft-repeated phrase by constructivist Alexander Wendt: ‘anarchy is what states make of it’ (1992). The claim sounds innocent but the potential consequences are far-reaching: sudde ...
Academic Dependency and the Global Division of Labor in the
... The fourth dimension refers to aid dependence. Foreign funds and technical aid originating from governments, educational institutions and foundations in the US, Great Britain, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Japan routinely find their way to scholars and educational institutions in the Third Wo ...
... The fourth dimension refers to aid dependence. Foreign funds and technical aid originating from governments, educational institutions and foundations in the US, Great Britain, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Japan routinely find their way to scholars and educational institutions in the Third Wo ...
Manifesto of computational social science
... to major critical event in the social economic and/or political spheres, such as global financial crises and the collapse of regimes. Finally, complex social systems do often show interdependences and interferences among their properties and processes of transformation. The interplay between cultura ...
... to major critical event in the social economic and/or political spheres, such as global financial crises and the collapse of regimes. Finally, complex social systems do often show interdependences and interferences among their properties and processes of transformation. The interplay between cultura ...
Glossary of Terms - Allies for Change
... for what is reality, they see themselves as normal or proper, whereas targets are likely to be labeled as deviant, evil, abnormal, substandard, or defective. RACISM : Racism is a system in which one race maintains supremacy over another race through a set of attitudes, behaviors, social structures, ...
... for what is reality, they see themselves as normal or proper, whereas targets are likely to be labeled as deviant, evil, abnormal, substandard, or defective. RACISM : Racism is a system in which one race maintains supremacy over another race through a set of attitudes, behaviors, social structures, ...
Loads of different rituals, important are
... CA is not primarily interested in universal cultural characteristics, but in the particularities. Cultural universals are (usually) biologically based. Anthropology always works from the particular towards the general, instead of the other way around like with most other sciences. ...
... CA is not primarily interested in universal cultural characteristics, but in the particularities. Cultural universals are (usually) biologically based. Anthropology always works from the particular towards the general, instead of the other way around like with most other sciences. ...
Marginalization - Dufour
... Transnationalization and social forums for marginalized people: A process of solidarities building and a work of translation As reported by Dufour et al. (2010), Dennis Young identified as early as 1992 major obstacles to the building of cross-border coalitions: political, cultural, and linguistic d ...
... Transnationalization and social forums for marginalized people: A process of solidarities building and a work of translation As reported by Dufour et al. (2010), Dennis Young identified as early as 1992 major obstacles to the building of cross-border coalitions: political, cultural, and linguistic d ...
Communication without Agents? From Agent-Oriented to
... very large scale in terms of goal-directed communication behavior of individual agents. Even if such data were available, the technical challenge of simultaneously running a very large number of agents (> 10.000) remains unresolved. Such a requirement is far beyond the capabilities of present agent ...
... very large scale in terms of goal-directed communication behavior of individual agents. Even if such data were available, the technical challenge of simultaneously running a very large number of agents (> 10.000) remains unresolved. Such a requirement is far beyond the capabilities of present agent ...
Tribe (Internet)
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kencf0618FacebookNetwork.jpg?width=300)
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.