Introduction - Environmental Science & Policy
... can pick and choose among the cultural variants that are on offer in the population, and ...
... can pick and choose among the cultural variants that are on offer in the population, and ...
A review of social identity theory with implications for
... the individual into a group provides the individual with the values and emotional attributes of group membership (Hogg and Terry, 2000). It is not a loss of personal identity but rather the acquisition of an additional identity. The power of social identity varies, but research has found that it is ...
... the individual into a group provides the individual with the values and emotional attributes of group membership (Hogg and Terry, 2000). It is not a loss of personal identity but rather the acquisition of an additional identity. The power of social identity varies, but research has found that it is ...
Accumulation, excess, childhood: Toward a
... of this crisis were shaped in the course of more than three decades of neoliberal policies and imperatives. Among them, the offloading of responsibility for social reproduction from the state and capital to individuals, households, and ‘civil society;’ disinvestments in the social wage more generall ...
... of this crisis were shaped in the course of more than three decades of neoliberal policies and imperatives. Among them, the offloading of responsibility for social reproduction from the state and capital to individuals, households, and ‘civil society;’ disinvestments in the social wage more generall ...
Deviance - Sociology
... 2. Deviance promotes social unity – punishing violators fosters a “we” feeling. It affirms the rightness of the group’s ways. 3. Deviance promotes social change – groups do not always agree on what to do with people who push beyond their accepted ways. If boundary violations gain enough support they ...
... 2. Deviance promotes social unity – punishing violators fosters a “we” feeling. It affirms the rightness of the group’s ways. 3. Deviance promotes social change – groups do not always agree on what to do with people who push beyond their accepted ways. If boundary violations gain enough support they ...
summary - Shodhganga
... hatred for someone or something). The term is also commonly used to refer to situations where 'mixed feelings' of a more general sort are experienced or where a person experiences uncertainty or indecisiveness concerning something. Ambivalence is the coexistence of two opposing drives, desires, fee ...
... hatred for someone or something). The term is also commonly used to refer to situations where 'mixed feelings' of a more general sort are experienced or where a person experiences uncertainty or indecisiveness concerning something. Ambivalence is the coexistence of two opposing drives, desires, fee ...
Prejudice and extremism - Zeitschrift für Internationale
... psychological processes, but cannot be reduced to it.25 According to Merton’s conception of a self-fulfilling prophecy, psychological group formation precedes and is influenced by actual group formation.26 Here, groups emerge because group members believe and act “as if the group is there” and in th ...
... psychological processes, but cannot be reduced to it.25 According to Merton’s conception of a self-fulfilling prophecy, psychological group formation precedes and is influenced by actual group formation.26 Here, groups emerge because group members believe and act “as if the group is there” and in th ...
Climate change, justice and vulnerability
... of concerns and include areas of social policy not normally associated with climate change. For example, care of elderly people, quality of neighbourhoods and levels of income inequality are all important for climate adaptation. Heatwaves and floods often reveal wider inequalities in the distributio ...
... of concerns and include areas of social policy not normally associated with climate change. For example, care of elderly people, quality of neighbourhoods and levels of income inequality are all important for climate adaptation. Heatwaves and floods often reveal wider inequalities in the distributio ...
Social Psychology
... › Also, a follow-up psychiatric exam 1 year later found no signs of harm or trauma in the participants › However, more recent investigations have discovered that many of Milgram’s participants were substantially upset as a result of their participation ...
... › Also, a follow-up psychiatric exam 1 year later found no signs of harm or trauma in the participants › However, more recent investigations have discovered that many of Milgram’s participants were substantially upset as a result of their participation ...
Shahar Ayal Francesca Gino
... from the inconsistency between one’s actual cheating behavior and one’s ethical values or attitudes. We argue that the discomfort produced by ethical dissonance, similar to the consequences of cognitive dissonance, calls for some kind of adjustment. Prior research has examined situations in which ob ...
... from the inconsistency between one’s actual cheating behavior and one’s ethical values or attitudes. We argue that the discomfort produced by ethical dissonance, similar to the consequences of cognitive dissonance, calls for some kind of adjustment. Prior research has examined situations in which ob ...
responsibility
... of qualified, trained professional usually implies that a skill is being offered which does not place the onus for its effectiveness on the client. Reasonably enough, in consulting a therapist or counsellor, clients expect to be cured, not to find that cure is a matter of their own responsibilty. Ps ...
... of qualified, trained professional usually implies that a skill is being offered which does not place the onus for its effectiveness on the client. Reasonably enough, in consulting a therapist or counsellor, clients expect to be cured, not to find that cure is a matter of their own responsibilty. Ps ...
Thinking about Social Problems
... Social Groups Institutions are made up of social groups. A social group is defined as two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship. For example, the family in which you were reared is a social group that is part of the family institution. The religious ass ...
... Social Groups Institutions are made up of social groups. A social group is defined as two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship. For example, the family in which you were reared is a social group that is part of the family institution. The religious ass ...
file - ORCA - Cardiff University
... the very nature of implicit bias means that increased awareness in itself would not be expected directly to mitigate bias and that change can only be effected through repeated conscious practice. However, despite recent studies that suggest that biases are more malleable, and responsive to self-regu ...
... the very nature of implicit bias means that increased awareness in itself would not be expected directly to mitigate bias and that change can only be effected through repeated conscious practice. However, despite recent studies that suggest that biases are more malleable, and responsive to self-regu ...
The Sociology of Age Identities
... work and take part in adult social life from a very young age. Similarly, the meaning of old age varies from society to society. In some traditional societies, the elderly are revered for their wisdom and have high social status and considerable power. As Giddens (2006) points out, this has traditio ...
... work and take part in adult social life from a very young age. Similarly, the meaning of old age varies from society to society. In some traditional societies, the elderly are revered for their wisdom and have high social status and considerable power. As Giddens (2006) points out, this has traditio ...
Evolutionary Social Psychology
... for the offspring of others (common among many social insects), would seem likely to be replaced by more selfish behaviors that led to successful reproduction. This dilemma was resolved when biologists began to understand processes of genetic inheritance. W. D. Hamilton (1964) explained that any gen ...
... for the offspring of others (common among many social insects), would seem likely to be replaced by more selfish behaviors that led to successful reproduction. This dilemma was resolved when biologists began to understand processes of genetic inheritance. W. D. Hamilton (1964) explained that any gen ...
Psy 259 Chapter 11 - Donna Vandergrift
... factors besides propinquity and attractiveness come into play in determining liking. Key among these is similarity to ourselves. People who are similar are attractive because they validate our own self-worth and we assume that people who disagree with us have negative personality traits. ...
... factors besides propinquity and attractiveness come into play in determining liking. Key among these is similarity to ourselves. People who are similar are attractive because they validate our own self-worth and we assume that people who disagree with us have negative personality traits. ...
Social Psychological Aspects of Computer
... Because electronic communication was developed Patterson, 1982). However, terminals and electronic and has been used by a distinctive subculture of signals convey fewer historical, contextual, and noncomputing professionals, its norms are infused with verbal cues. Electronic media do not efficiently ...
... Because electronic communication was developed Patterson, 1982). However, terminals and electronic and has been used by a distinctive subculture of signals convey fewer historical, contextual, and noncomputing professionals, its norms are infused with verbal cues. Electronic media do not efficiently ...
Social Perception
... sequences through which the individual must move to attain the desired state › Ex. We know that the appropriate behavioral sequence for eating in a restaurant is to enter, wait to be seated by a waiter, order a drink, look at the menu, order the meal, eat, pay the bill and leave ...
... sequences through which the individual must move to attain the desired state › Ex. We know that the appropriate behavioral sequence for eating in a restaurant is to enter, wait to be seated by a waiter, order a drink, look at the menu, order the meal, eat, pay the bill and leave ...
Parameters of Non-Accommodation - Sydney Symposium of Social
... Within the first (social regulation) function, a number of more specific social effects of accommodation have been put forward, among them identifying or appearing similar to others, maintaining face, maintaining a relationship, and maintaining interpersonal control as it relates to power or status ...
... Within the first (social regulation) function, a number of more specific social effects of accommodation have been put forward, among them identifying or appearing similar to others, maintaining face, maintaining a relationship, and maintaining interpersonal control as it relates to power or status ...
Social Structure and Personality
... to investigate the convergence hypothesis—"that the standardized institutional environments of modem society induce standard patterns of response, despite the countervailing randomizing effects of persisting traditional patterns of culture" (1960, p. 1). Inkeles argued that the new structures of ind ...
... to investigate the convergence hypothesis—"that the standardized institutional environments of modem society induce standard patterns of response, despite the countervailing randomizing effects of persisting traditional patterns of culture" (1960, p. 1). Inkeles argued that the new structures of ind ...
MVACL Summary of Policy and Protocol
... Make their own informed choices Participate in community to the extent that they wish or desire; Have the opportunity to learn and grow Experience failure and the natural consequences of their choices. We value capacity not incapacity, everyone has something to contribute to the life and dev ...
... Make their own informed choices Participate in community to the extent that they wish or desire; Have the opportunity to learn and grow Experience failure and the natural consequences of their choices. We value capacity not incapacity, everyone has something to contribute to the life and dev ...
that they were relatively permanent passionate strivings, the „forces
... which society is exposed. There is no „society“ in general but only specific social structures which operate in different and ascertainable ways. Although these social structures do change in the course of historical development, they are relatively fixed at any given historical period and society c ...
... which society is exposed. There is no „society“ in general but only specific social structures which operate in different and ascertainable ways. Although these social structures do change in the course of historical development, they are relatively fixed at any given historical period and society c ...
Read Article - Thomas Homer
... developments in computational social science. We first point to major gaps and disagreements in existing scholarship related to ideology from across social science disciplines. Second, we explain how a complex systems view of ideology might provide ways of bridging at least some of those gaps and co ...
... developments in computational social science. We first point to major gaps and disagreements in existing scholarship related to ideology from across social science disciplines. Second, we explain how a complex systems view of ideology might provide ways of bridging at least some of those gaps and co ...
An Evolutionary Account of Law
... EGT. This theory studies the action of agents under repeated games and who can even play always with the same individuals. This theory tries to show how social and moral rules can be understood as the result of multiple interactions between individuals under given circumstances, such as a specific s ...
... EGT. This theory studies the action of agents under repeated games and who can even play always with the same individuals. This theory tries to show how social and moral rules can be understood as the result of multiple interactions between individuals under given circumstances, such as a specific s ...
Dishonesty Explained What - Duke People
... The last two decades has witnessed what it seems to be an increasing number of cases of dishonesty, from corporate corruption and employee misconduct to questionable behaviors during the financial crisis and individual acts of unethical behavior in many spheres of society. When considered together, ...
... The last two decades has witnessed what it seems to be an increasing number of cases of dishonesty, from corporate corruption and employee misconduct to questionable behaviors during the financial crisis and individual acts of unethical behavior in many spheres of society. When considered together, ...
Psychotic Determination in Delirio by Laura Restrepo
... public. There is only one social surface and individuals undertake processes of subjective transformation according to the libidinal investments of desire that permeate this surface. McAlister’s Desire and the Macrocosm of Colombia’s Socio-Political Crisis Delirio adheres to a psychoanalytical premi ...
... public. There is only one social surface and individuals undertake processes of subjective transformation according to the libidinal investments of desire that permeate this surface. McAlister’s Desire and the Macrocosm of Colombia’s Socio-Political Crisis Delirio adheres to a psychoanalytical premi ...