Habitus, Field , and Capital. Elements for a
... field, starting from the agent’s interested and strategic behavior. • The above compels us to empirically identify the initial capital stock, which comprises one or more species, and to explain the agent’s mutations in the context of struggles and competitions for the control of the field that suppo ...
... field, starting from the agent’s interested and strategic behavior. • The above compels us to empirically identify the initial capital stock, which comprises one or more species, and to explain the agent’s mutations in the context of struggles and competitions for the control of the field that suppo ...
Third World Quarterly 16
... allocating scarce resources. The consequences are often unrealistic and trivial results derived from narrow, simplistic analyses that ignore the complexities surrounding Third W orld economic realities. The gap between theory and reality within neoclassical econom ics is largely rooted in a series o ...
... allocating scarce resources. The consequences are often unrealistic and trivial results derived from narrow, simplistic analyses that ignore the complexities surrounding Third W orld economic realities. The gap between theory and reality within neoclassical econom ics is largely rooted in a series o ...
IOSR Journal of Business and Management (IOSR-JBM)
... Chief determinants of values in a democratic political community as the primary source of basic… 1.2.1 Some pertinent background aspects of the article In this disputation, we are concerned with what we have called the basis theory of Public Administration in an earlier context. This is the area of ...
... Chief determinants of values in a democratic political community as the primary source of basic… 1.2.1 Some pertinent background aspects of the article In this disputation, we are concerned with what we have called the basis theory of Public Administration in an earlier context. This is the area of ...
clicking this link
... Week 3. 11/10/10: Why should anyone interested in politics study fiction? There are still some who think ‘politics’ is just about parties, policy-making and parliaments; there are others who now conceive of ‘politics’ so widely the term almost loses a precise meaning. This lecture will look at how ...
... Week 3. 11/10/10: Why should anyone interested in politics study fiction? There are still some who think ‘politics’ is just about parties, policy-making and parliaments; there are others who now conceive of ‘politics’ so widely the term almost loses a precise meaning. This lecture will look at how ...
Loss Aversion, Presidential Responsibility, and Midterm
... orists and empirical scholars explain the president’s party’s midterm losses by implicitly or explicitly asserting that midterm and presidential elections are different (in terms of voters’ behaviors, perceptions, information, ideologies, partisanship, or some combination of all of these factors). ...
... orists and empirical scholars explain the president’s party’s midterm losses by implicitly or explicitly asserting that midterm and presidential elections are different (in terms of voters’ behaviors, perceptions, information, ideologies, partisanship, or some combination of all of these factors). ...
Pluralism, Poverty and Sharecropping: Cultivating Open
... generates a dialogue across epistemological chasms and across theories that have different underlying assumptions. Pluralist research can be valued for its discursive bridging function. Pluralist research can also contribute to improvements in scientific measurement. Divergent schools of thought can b ...
... generates a dialogue across epistemological chasms and across theories that have different underlying assumptions. Pluralist research can be valued for its discursive bridging function. Pluralist research can also contribute to improvements in scientific measurement. Divergent schools of thought can b ...
28974 - World bank documents
... chosen psychological insights that I think are helpful in understanding a few phenomena in development economics: parents’ schooling decisions, savings, financial institutions, bureaucratic corruption, and property rights. For each of these I describe a small piece of the psychology that may be pote ...
... chosen psychological insights that I think are helpful in understanding a few phenomena in development economics: parents’ schooling decisions, savings, financial institutions, bureaucratic corruption, and property rights. For each of these I describe a small piece of the psychology that may be pote ...
DOC - World bank documents
... understand a few core issues in development economics, such as savings, education and property rights. This evidence gives us new interpretations for a variety of behavior in these contexts. It also enriches the set of policy tools we should consider. Not only does it suggest some dramatically new t ...
... understand a few core issues in development economics, such as savings, education and property rights. This evidence gives us new interpretations for a variety of behavior in these contexts. It also enriches the set of policy tools we should consider. Not only does it suggest some dramatically new t ...
Durham Research Online
... thinker of all times, had certain reservations about the economic and cultural claims of the working class. L.T. Hobhouse, on the other hand, embraced ideas of equality and redistribution to an extent that raised the question why the “socialist” label has not been more firmly attached to him. Yet as ...
... thinker of all times, had certain reservations about the economic and cultural claims of the working class. L.T. Hobhouse, on the other hand, embraced ideas of equality and redistribution to an extent that raised the question why the “socialist” label has not been more firmly attached to him. Yet as ...
If a Pure Market Economy Is So Good, Why Doesn`t It Exist? The
... discussion of “Z-goods.” Cigarettes, instead of being treated as a final consumer good (X-good), could be analyzed as an input for what Becker calls Z-goods, which require other goods for a household to produce. A meal, for example, is a Z-good that requires various food ingredients (Ekelund, Hébert ...
... discussion of “Z-goods.” Cigarettes, instead of being treated as a final consumer good (X-good), could be analyzed as an input for what Becker calls Z-goods, which require other goods for a household to produce. A meal, for example, is a Z-good that requires various food ingredients (Ekelund, Hébert ...
UNDERSTANDING BUREAUCRATIC BEHAVIOR: IMPLICATIONS
... oversight committee, city council, county commission, or any other individual or group with legislative powers) has a good deal of control over a bureau. Niskanen (1975, 1994: 275-278) also accepted the Breton-Wintrobe (1975) critique, and considered active oversight monitoring in his reformulated m ...
... oversight committee, city council, county commission, or any other individual or group with legislative powers) has a good deal of control over a bureau. Niskanen (1975, 1994: 275-278) also accepted the Breton-Wintrobe (1975) critique, and considered active oversight monitoring in his reformulated m ...
civil economy - Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences
... have in common is their universal ‘killability’, i.e. the fact that anyone can be killed by anyone else. Conflict, competition, the war to subdue others and gain power is the normal state of men, whereas peace and concord are transient. Thus the foundation of social life is fear. Typical, and poles ...
... have in common is their universal ‘killability’, i.e. the fact that anyone can be killed by anyone else. Conflict, competition, the war to subdue others and gain power is the normal state of men, whereas peace and concord are transient. Thus the foundation of social life is fear. Typical, and poles ...
Review: The Future of American Democracy: A Former
... The shift from an open system of expansion into a contained system informs Browder’s concerns in the other three propositions and each of the successive propositions builds upon the next. Browder argues that public discourse is constrained by a “philosophical civil war” and democracy no longer funct ...
... The shift from an open system of expansion into a contained system informs Browder’s concerns in the other three propositions and each of the successive propositions builds upon the next. Browder argues that public discourse is constrained by a “philosophical civil war” and democracy no longer funct ...
RCCL PowerPoint - DePaul University
... ►We have a classically youthful sense of invincibility ►We don’t perceive leaders as learners ►We show little respect for foreign methods / ideas (because, after all, “everyone wants to come here”) ...
... ►We have a classically youthful sense of invincibility ►We don’t perceive leaders as learners ►We show little respect for foreign methods / ideas (because, after all, “everyone wants to come here”) ...
Employee Termination Notice
... your name is currently different from your birth certificate) before payment of a benefit can be made. A termination benefit will be issued as soon as possible after the applicant’s date of termination. The timing is subject to receipt of any required documentation from the employer and the applican ...
... your name is currently different from your birth certificate) before payment of a benefit can be made. A termination benefit will be issued as soon as possible after the applicant’s date of termination. The timing is subject to receipt of any required documentation from the employer and the applican ...
minimal justice and regime change in brian orend`s political ethics
... his subsequent works, particularly in the book “The Morality of War” (2006). The notion of “minimally just” political community was used by Orend in order to sustain key theses of his just war theory, while it could be considered as an autonomous political ethics concept. Orend takes a specific Kant ...
... his subsequent works, particularly in the book “The Morality of War” (2006). The notion of “minimally just” political community was used by Orend in order to sustain key theses of his just war theory, while it could be considered as an autonomous political ethics concept. Orend takes a specific Kant ...
Modernization Theory and the Sociological Study of Development.
... Several additional points can be made to supplement this very brief outline. Within the basic assumptions and methodological procedure of modernization theory, there is a considerable variety of emphasis on different levels--according to whether conceptual priority is assigned to personality factors ...
... Several additional points can be made to supplement this very brief outline. Within the basic assumptions and methodological procedure of modernization theory, there is a considerable variety of emphasis on different levels--according to whether conceptual priority is assigned to personality factors ...
On the ethics and practice of contemporary social theory: from crisis
... text. In a chatty lull from our editorial work, one of the subcommittee members comments, ‘‘You know, it occurs to me that we might also want to take advantage of this moment to suggest new directions in which Cornell humanities could grow.’’ The rest of us nod encouragingly. She continues, ‘‘It doe ...
... text. In a chatty lull from our editorial work, one of the subcommittee members comments, ‘‘You know, it occurs to me that we might also want to take advantage of this moment to suggest new directions in which Cornell humanities could grow.’’ The rest of us nod encouragingly. She continues, ‘‘It doe ...
Vrablikova and Cisar WPSA paper
... and disappointment with the actual economic and political performance of these democracies that sharply contrasts with high expectations and enthusiasm about ideal of democracy as it was seen in the early 1990s (Mishler and Rose 1997, Catterberg and Moreno 2005). Empirical evidence supporting this “ ...
... and disappointment with the actual economic and political performance of these democracies that sharply contrasts with high expectations and enthusiasm about ideal of democracy as it was seen in the early 1990s (Mishler and Rose 1997, Catterberg and Moreno 2005). Empirical evidence supporting this “ ...
The pragmatic importance of theory for
... in journal articles. As a result, many researchers also lock in and defend theories that have failed to establish any explanatory utility. Finally, as a partial result of that, researchers also lock into efforts to tortuously explain or support perspectives that have been repeatedly discredited. The ...
... in journal articles. As a result, many researchers also lock in and defend theories that have failed to establish any explanatory utility. Finally, as a partial result of that, researchers also lock into efforts to tortuously explain or support perspectives that have been repeatedly discredited. The ...
Evaluating the Social Justice Implications of the New Theory of
... has shown that the connection between normative and positive economics is more complex than Friedman believed,5 yet it remains accurate to state that policy advocates use dominant wage theories to understand social reality, and to make their case to stakeholders that their proposed action will lead ...
... has shown that the connection between normative and positive economics is more complex than Friedman believed,5 yet it remains accurate to state that policy advocates use dominant wage theories to understand social reality, and to make their case to stakeholders that their proposed action will lead ...
Special education – theory and theory talk
... Deconstructing special education We start our examination by looking behind special education1 to its intellectual foundations and to its construction. We look in this chapter at the growth of special education, at its many faces, at its reconstruction of itself in different forms and at its respons ...
... Deconstructing special education We start our examination by looking behind special education1 to its intellectual foundations and to its construction. We look in this chapter at the growth of special education, at its many faces, at its reconstruction of itself in different forms and at its respons ...
PAR template 11-22 - FSU Local Governance Research Lab.
... and Fowler (1967), who argued that reform institutions insulate municipal government from private demands. The council-manager form of government is presumed to allow for greater consideration of long-term interests, and therefore encourages long-term development projects, such as revenue bond-funde ...
... and Fowler (1967), who argued that reform institutions insulate municipal government from private demands. The council-manager form of government is presumed to allow for greater consideration of long-term interests, and therefore encourages long-term development projects, such as revenue bond-funde ...
Random Utility Maximization with Indifference†
... random. Lu’s approach enables the modeler to avoid taking a stance on how indifference is resolved by formulating the random choice rule as a function on an algebra of sets. Thus, if {1, 2} is a minimal set in that algebra, the random choice rule specifies only the overall probability of choosing 1 or ...
... random. Lu’s approach enables the modeler to avoid taking a stance on how indifference is resolved by formulating the random choice rule as a function on an algebra of sets. Thus, if {1, 2} is a minimal set in that algebra, the random choice rule specifies only the overall probability of choosing 1 or ...
Still critical after all these years? The past, present and future of
... Schmidt, The Political Discourse of Anarchy (New York: SUNY Press, 1998). See, for example, the discussions in Chris Brown, Sovereignty Rights and Justice: International Political Theory Today (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2002). ...
... Schmidt, The Political Discourse of Anarchy (New York: SUNY Press, 1998). See, for example, the discussions in Chris Brown, Sovereignty Rights and Justice: International Political Theory Today (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2002). ...