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Community Place Attachment and its Role in Social
Community Place Attachment and its Role in Social

... social or physical (both built and natural) elements” (Scannell & Gifford, 2010, p. 1). The present chapter addresses all three dimensions of their framework, but is more concerned with collective/group aspects of PA. In terms of psychological processes, we see emotional bonds to home/community and ...
Stereotyping, Prejudice and Discrimination
Stereotyping, Prejudice and Discrimination

... •Strongly related to how a person treats those group members •May stem from purely emotional or gut reactions to a social group as a whole or to an individual member of group. ...
AS EDEXCEL PSYCHOLOGY 2008
AS EDEXCEL PSYCHOLOGY 2008

...  Circular argument: it cannot be defined independently from obedience – people obey because they are in an agentic state, but are in an agentic because they obey. Circular arguments have limited explanatory value – because you simply go around in circles!  Personality (charisma): it doesn’t take i ...
Multicultural Counseling - Fellowship of Christian Counselors
Multicultural Counseling - Fellowship of Christian Counselors

... • Immediate and extended family, friends, or community cultural resources ...
The Science of Psychology
The Science of Psychology

... • Social psychology – the scientific study of how a person’s thoughts, feelings, and behavior are influenced by the real, imagined, or implied presence of others. • Social influence - the process through which the real or implied presence of others can directly or indirectly influence the thoughts, ...
Communication and social behaviour
Communication and social behaviour

... insensitive, erratic in their behaviour towards the infant. ...
The social construction of the risk
The social construction of the risk

... to solve and can hardly be disposed of just like that. However, we can already intuitively feel that the most elegant hypothesis excludes the extremes: it is undoubtedly in the happy medium between determinism and indeterminism that the key to the problem will be found… And, likewise, the happy medi ...
Chapter Fifteen - University of Mississippi
Chapter Fifteen - University of Mississippi

...  Internal locus of control—individuals who believe they are in control of their lives.  External locus of control—individuals believe that external forces dictate what happen to them. ...
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... as a “pervasive pattern of social inhibition, feelings of inadequacy, and hypersensitivity to negative evaluation” in which a person displays four of the following characteristics:   1.  Avoids occupational activities that involve significant interpersonal contact because of fears of criticism, di ...
SOCIAL SIN
SOCIAL SIN

... oppressing him for one's own advantage (cf. Mt 10:40-42; 20:25; Mk 10:42-45; Lk 22:25-27). 39. The exercise of solidarity within each society is valid when its members recognize one another as persons. Those who are more influential, because they have a greater share of goods and common services, sh ...
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abs_pres_symp_intro_2015-1v1yrsa

... birds and primates, brought him into direct contact with the revolution in neurobiology, psychology, linguistics and cognitive science. Among the many scientific questions that attracted his interest were questions about how animals perceive the world, acquire information from it, and act on what the ...
LO 18.2
LO 18.2

... can also be learned through direct instruction and interaction with others. Vicarious or observational learning is observation of other people's actions and reactions to various objects, people, or situations. An attitude can be learned by observing the emotional reactions of others, and behavior ca ...
Self, identity and Interpersonal relationship in individualized
Self, identity and Interpersonal relationship in individualized

...  Apart from interactionalist perspective of analyzing how an individuals internalizes role expectations and performances into their selves and constitutes her role-based identity, Henri Tajfel and his followers most notably John C. Turner look at formation of group identity formation as a social pr ...
Theories of Anthropology
Theories of Anthropology

... do fieldwork At first the emphasis was on fieldwork rather then participation When 1913 edition of Notes and Queries was published there was an argument for intensive participant observation studies, to be carried out by a sole researcher in a small population over a period of at least a year ...
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Founding Some Practical Disciplines in Schutzian Social

... and “Equality and the Meaning Structure of the Social World” (1955). 1 Then again, as will be seen below, what Schutz characterized in “Stranger” and “Homecomer” as social psychology, was characterized in Schutz’s masterpiece, Der sinnhafte Aufbau der sozialen Welt (1932), as “Soziologie,” although ...
Lsn 21 India - The University of Southern Mississippi
Lsn 21 India - The University of Southern Mississippi

... – Members of the same jati ate together, intermarried, and cared for their own sick – Elaborate rules dictated how members of different jati addressed each other and communicated – Violation of the rules could result in expulsion from the larger group ...
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Racial Equity Tools Glossary

... dominance of the dominating group by maintaining or participating in the set of attitudes, behaviors, social structures and ideologies that undergird the dominating group's power. It involves four essential and interconnected elements: Decision-making - Due to racism, people of color do not have the ...
From Private Attitude to Public Opinion: A
From Private Attitude to Public Opinion: A

... to which they belong. In other words, individuals in a given social context behave differently than they would outside that context. These relations, taken together, suggest that the interactive impact of individuals and their social context can result in the emergence of new regularities at the lev ...
(Dis)respecting versus (Dis)liking
(Dis)respecting versus (Dis)liking

... elicited less agreement than the positive traits (e.g., industrious, warm); they are both less frequent and more extreme. For these reasons, then, our subsequent analyses focused on the positive ends of the competence and warmth dimensions. Of course, negativity can (and does) come out in low rating ...
Is a Marxist psychology from a first person perspective possible
Is a Marxist psychology from a first person perspective possible

... participation. What follows from this, is that it is simply methodologically insufficient to try to understand and explain people’s actions and our social reality from a distance: using for example only quantitative methods, statistics, experiments or fixed descriptions, conversations or observation ...
Adlerian Theory and Human Development
Adlerian Theory and Human Development

... complained of extreme anxiety (i.e. headaches, vomiting) when she had to present something before a group or audience. Her standards of “good enough” were very high. In her mind, she could not be held to the same standard as others because she achieved more than others when she presented something. ...
memory, narratives and identity. how people recall,transmit and live
memory, narratives and identity. how people recall,transmit and live

... the authors find that men and women use different strategies to define events as historically important. Fournier and Wineburg (1997) when studying how schoolchildren viewed the past also found that boys and girls differed in their drawings. The same event or person generated different views, more o ...
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 14

... toward someone who validates their own self-concept, even if the self-concept is low. iv) The Equity Principle: According to equity or exchange theories, social relationships function as transactions in which partners exchange goods and services. A friendship is most stable if the individuals involv ...
File - MrGillPE.com
File - MrGillPE.com

... This attack on the player’s beliefs causes a change in attitude and the player now does aerobics to keep fit. ...
Sample ROUGH DRAFT
Sample ROUGH DRAFT

... babies. They may feel that breaking the law is acceptable or necessary to enforce the laws they believe in. Social norms waiver throughout cultures (Appelbaum, 235). The absolutist view is ...
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Group dynamics

Group dynamics is a system of behaviors and psychological processes occurring within a social group (intragroup dynamics), or between social groups (intergroup dynamics). The study of group dynamics can be useful in understanding decision-making behavior, tracking the spread of diseases in society, creating effective therapy techniques, and following the emergence and popularity of new ideas and technologies. Group dynamics are at the core of understanding racism, sexism, and other forms of social prejudice and discrimination. These applications of the field are studied in psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science, epidemiology, education, social work, business, and communication studies.
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