![The Quest for a Universal Social Work: Some Issues and Implications](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/004619764_1-719f02748ec95128736a24995cbcbeff-300x300.png)
The Quest for a Universal Social Work: Some Issues and Implications
... moral, artistic, and creative dimensions (Goldstein, 1986, 1992; Gray & Aga Askeland, 2002; Imre, 1984). Yet another concerns whether there is such a thing as international social work (see Ife, 2000). There are many such debates. The paper is organised in the following way. First we discuss the con ...
... moral, artistic, and creative dimensions (Goldstein, 1986, 1992; Gray & Aga Askeland, 2002; Imre, 1984). Yet another concerns whether there is such a thing as international social work (see Ife, 2000). There are many such debates. The paper is organised in the following way. First we discuss the con ...
Responsibilism and the Analytic-Sociological Debate in Social
... roughly the same imperfect cognitive capacities, albeit with varying degrees of access to one another’s activities. (Fuller 1988, 3) He later defines social epistemology as a “naturalistic approach to the normative questions surrounding the organization of knowledge processes and products” (Fuller 2 ...
... roughly the same imperfect cognitive capacities, albeit with varying degrees of access to one another’s activities. (Fuller 1988, 3) He later defines social epistemology as a “naturalistic approach to the normative questions surrounding the organization of knowledge processes and products” (Fuller 2 ...
Registration Palatino Bernhard Modern BernhMod a Courier eWorld
... anonymity. All names have been changed except those of historical personages and public figures mentioned by respondents. [One convention has been employed throughout: each respondent who uses hashish can be identified as such by the fact that he is given only a pseudonymous first name; each non-usi ...
... anonymity. All names have been changed except those of historical personages and public figures mentioned by respondents. [One convention has been employed throughout: each respondent who uses hashish can be identified as such by the fact that he is given only a pseudonymous first name; each non-usi ...
Behavioral Effects in Individual Decisions of Network Formation
... transferability of value in the network, and social tradeoff between own payoff and others’ payoff. These properties complicate the choices that individuals make about creating and maintaining links in the network. We examine whether these choices therefore become systematically less payoff-driven, i.e. ...
... transferability of value in the network, and social tradeoff between own payoff and others’ payoff. These properties complicate the choices that individuals make about creating and maintaining links in the network. We examine whether these choices therefore become systematically less payoff-driven, i.e. ...
Critical Discourse Analysis
... sentence examples e.g. the word ‘This’ can be used at the start of a discussion to foreground the topic under discussion and identify it as important to the speaker, whereas the word ‘That’ could be used to background or marginalise a topic and place it is a subordinate position, from the speaker’s ...
... sentence examples e.g. the word ‘This’ can be used at the start of a discussion to foreground the topic under discussion and identify it as important to the speaker, whereas the word ‘That’ could be used to background or marginalise a topic and place it is a subordinate position, from the speaker’s ...
Document
... which words as good are used. Anthropology: They are concerned with language as an essential part of cultural and behavioural patterns. One specific area of anthropological research that is particularly interesting in connection to semantics is that of kinship (complex kinship relations of many so ...
... which words as good are used. Anthropology: They are concerned with language as an essential part of cultural and behavioural patterns. One specific area of anthropological research that is particularly interesting in connection to semantics is that of kinship (complex kinship relations of many so ...
Social Policy and the Crisis of Neo-Liberalism Ben Fine
... they also prevail elsewhere to a greater or lesser extent and in conjunction with many other economic and social processes that generate the complex causes and incidence of poverty and inequality. The impact of the crisis is liable to be severe, uneven and unpredictable, Naudé (2009) for an overview ...
... they also prevail elsewhere to a greater or lesser extent and in conjunction with many other economic and social processes that generate the complex causes and incidence of poverty and inequality. The impact of the crisis is liable to be severe, uneven and unpredictable, Naudé (2009) for an overview ...
Vitality entry in Wiley encyclopedia
... factors that contribute to the group’s ability to act collectively. The refined SV model aims to specify the mechanisms of members’ emotional attachment to the group and its Collective Identity as specified in the CAM model (Figure 3, centre). The SV model includes four components: Perceived Strengt ...
... factors that contribute to the group’s ability to act collectively. The refined SV model aims to specify the mechanisms of members’ emotional attachment to the group and its Collective Identity as specified in the CAM model (Figure 3, centre). The SV model includes four components: Perceived Strengt ...
(18/22) Economy: Definition, Kula and Potlatch.
... Kula valuables never remain for long in the hands of the recipients; rather, they must be passed on to other partners within a certain amount of time, thus constantly circling around the ring. However, even temporary possession brings prestige and status. Important chiefs can have ...
... Kula valuables never remain for long in the hands of the recipients; rather, they must be passed on to other partners within a certain amount of time, thus constantly circling around the ring. However, even temporary possession brings prestige and status. Important chiefs can have ...
THE SOCIETY FOR APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY
... a social change project. A good example of this new look applied anthropology appears in the study of Rizo(1988) concerning drug addiction. The first step is to hear people, to understand the "drug cultural pattern" before to act. Applied anthropology is no more the "black duck", but well a kind of ...
... a social change project. A good example of this new look applied anthropology appears in the study of Rizo(1988) concerning drug addiction. The first step is to hear people, to understand the "drug cultural pattern" before to act. Applied anthropology is no more the "black duck", but well a kind of ...
The Woman in Pieces: Advertising and the
... in the media and an interpretation to a concrete case of advertising construction of the feminine identity in Brazil. Its goal is to indicate that anthropology has a distinctive way of analysis that is an important contribution for the dialogue that should characterize research over the immense repe ...
... in the media and an interpretation to a concrete case of advertising construction of the feminine identity in Brazil. Its goal is to indicate that anthropology has a distinctive way of analysis that is an important contribution for the dialogue that should characterize research over the immense repe ...
Book of Abstracts
... argue that this has less to do with epistemic uncertainties - although there are significant antinomies inherent in the presuppositions about the stability of social categories inherent in most social sciences – and more with transformations in the nature and reach of the agency and interactions of ...
... argue that this has less to do with epistemic uncertainties - although there are significant antinomies inherent in the presuppositions about the stability of social categories inherent in most social sciences – and more with transformations in the nature and reach of the agency and interactions of ...
Organization
... reflected in organizational practices. We refer to such communication, which announces ideals and intentions rather than reflect actual behaviours, as aspirational talk. Although aspirational talk may lead to pretense, deceit and decoupling as some empirical evidence suggest (e.g. Boiral, 2007; Khan ...
... reflected in organizational practices. We refer to such communication, which announces ideals and intentions rather than reflect actual behaviours, as aspirational talk. Although aspirational talk may lead to pretense, deceit and decoupling as some empirical evidence suggest (e.g. Boiral, 2007; Khan ...
quantitative and qualitative - BU Blogs
... software, Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis Software (CAQDAS), various narrative-based methods, as well as more generic forms of content analysis. There is no such thing as a non-quantifiable observation because any single statement that can be made about one phenomenon could also be made ...
... software, Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis Software (CAQDAS), various narrative-based methods, as well as more generic forms of content analysis. There is no such thing as a non-quantifiable observation because any single statement that can be made about one phenomenon could also be made ...
Methodological & Epistemological Foundations of EAP
... Analytical approach: … In Paul Lazarsfeld own words, “No science deals with its objects of study in their concreteness. It selects certain of their properties and attempts to establish relations among them. The finding of such laws is the ultimate goal of all scientific inquiries. But in social sc ...
... Analytical approach: … In Paul Lazarsfeld own words, “No science deals with its objects of study in their concreteness. It selects certain of their properties and attempts to establish relations among them. The finding of such laws is the ultimate goal of all scientific inquiries. But in social sc ...
Sociological discourse, year 3, number 6 / December
... taverns as a phenomenon that brings a particular way of communication, separate from the outside world. Speaking of communication within the taverns, it is necessary to recall that Habermas points out that language fulfills three functions: cultural reproduction, social integration and socialization ...
... taverns as a phenomenon that brings a particular way of communication, separate from the outside world. Speaking of communication within the taverns, it is necessary to recall that Habermas points out that language fulfills three functions: cultural reproduction, social integration and socialization ...
Document
... innovation, investigating how inventions come about, how a new idea can turn into a successful product or service, how this process can be fostered or inhibited by particular organizational structures, and so forth. Similarly, there have been countless policies and programs aimed at spurring innova ...
... innovation, investigating how inventions come about, how a new idea can turn into a successful product or service, how this process can be fostered or inhibited by particular organizational structures, and so forth. Similarly, there have been countless policies and programs aimed at spurring innova ...
A new kind of symmetry: Actor-network theories
... important are Susan Leigh Star's (1991) reflections 'on being allergic to onions'?, or the topology of anaemia in Africa and the Netherlands (Mol and Law, 1994)? Do we need to understand the French terms: problematisation, interessement, enrolment and mobilisation, deployed by Michel Callon (1986) t ...
... important are Susan Leigh Star's (1991) reflections 'on being allergic to onions'?, or the topology of anaemia in Africa and the Netherlands (Mol and Law, 1994)? Do we need to understand the French terms: problematisation, interessement, enrolment and mobilisation, deployed by Michel Callon (1986) t ...
Emotions versus Reasons: A Critical Analysis of Jon Elster`s View
... instrumental utility of such norms is highly questionable, they often change in manners that remind us of cultural fashions, but they are nevertheless very present and very effective in our societies. The second class of social norms cited is the one of norms against behavior socially perceived as b ...
... instrumental utility of such norms is highly questionable, they often change in manners that remind us of cultural fashions, but they are nevertheless very present and very effective in our societies. The second class of social norms cited is the one of norms against behavior socially perceived as b ...
Tough times, meaningful music, mature performers: popular
... Media preferences and social reality Acknowledging music’s seemingly intrinsic relationship to individuals’ social identity, as well as its role in the regulation of a variety of transitory affective states, it is plausible that music preferences might also be a reflection of, or reaction to, more g ...
... Media preferences and social reality Acknowledging music’s seemingly intrinsic relationship to individuals’ social identity, as well as its role in the regulation of a variety of transitory affective states, it is plausible that music preferences might also be a reflection of, or reaction to, more g ...
GIS and Society: A Critical Assessment
... The degree to which the private sector has dominated the development of GIS, The types of problems that potential customers for GIS wish to solve, Factors affecting data availability and cost, Weakness of geography as an intellectual discipline in the US, which affects the degree to which geographic ...
... The degree to which the private sector has dominated the development of GIS, The types of problems that potential customers for GIS wish to solve, Factors affecting data availability and cost, Weakness of geography as an intellectual discipline in the US, which affects the degree to which geographic ...
Interpretivist Approaches to Organizational Discourse
... and several scholars emphasize this point. For Weber (1922), for example, the search for generalizations derived inductively from first-order data was compatible with, and indeed dependent on, the need for meaningful understanding of social action. His ideal types were aimed inductively to derive se ...
... and several scholars emphasize this point. For Weber (1922), for example, the search for generalizations derived inductively from first-order data was compatible with, and indeed dependent on, the need for meaningful understanding of social action. His ideal types were aimed inductively to derive se ...
Causal Mechanisms and Process Patterns
... Take for example the excellent review article by John Gerring, which carries the title “The mechanismic worldview: thinking inside the box”.5 In this article, Gerring detects nine different meanings of the term “mechanism” and concludes that the core of the concept is “the pathway or process by whic ...
... Take for example the excellent review article by John Gerring, which carries the title “The mechanismic worldview: thinking inside the box”.5 In this article, Gerring detects nine different meanings of the term “mechanism” and concludes that the core of the concept is “the pathway or process by whic ...
Aalborg Universitet Representations from the past Sammut, Gordon; Tsirogianni, Stavroula; Wagoner, Brady
... dimension. Bartlett (1923, pp. 12–13) argues that, “It is only if we interpret individual to mean pre-social that we can take psychology to be prehistoric. The truth is that there are some individual responses which simply do not occur outside a social group”. Following Halbwachs, Bartlett refers to ...
... dimension. Bartlett (1923, pp. 12–13) argues that, “It is only if we interpret individual to mean pre-social that we can take psychology to be prehistoric. The truth is that there are some individual responses which simply do not occur outside a social group”. Following Halbwachs, Bartlett refers to ...
The Nature of Social Science Research
... scientist as male, and substitute the term ‘analysis’ for ‘classification’, we recognise the essential sequence of tasks involved in social science research. Just as a geologist might explore rock formations, analyse what is found, and then theorise, based on this analysis, that the area was previou ...
... scientist as male, and substitute the term ‘analysis’ for ‘classification’, we recognise the essential sequence of tasks involved in social science research. Just as a geologist might explore rock formations, analyse what is found, and then theorise, based on this analysis, that the area was previou ...
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.