Introduction - Imprint Academic
... side of this cultural war over values. But my argument is that conservatives can more easily win this cultural war by using Darwinian biology as an intellectual weapon supporting traditional morality — and conservative principles generally — as grounded in human nature. I am not alone in making this ...
... side of this cultural war over values. But my argument is that conservatives can more easily win this cultural war by using Darwinian biology as an intellectual weapon supporting traditional morality — and conservative principles generally — as grounded in human nature. I am not alone in making this ...
Chapter 1: Sociology: Theory and Method Third Edition
... concerns about power, conflict, and ideology. – This perspective is most commonly applied to capitalism and economic systems. – Marxist thinkers tend to take on an activist stance in addition to a scholarly one. ...
... concerns about power, conflict, and ideology. – This perspective is most commonly applied to capitalism and economic systems. – Marxist thinkers tend to take on an activist stance in addition to a scholarly one. ...
Class, community, and crisis in post
... of “the individual”, “the market”, “social mobility” and “choice” have failed a significant proportion of the working-class population. Moreover, it shows how well anthropology can capture the subtle and complex forms of collectivity through which people find meaning in times of change. Keywords: Br ...
... of “the individual”, “the market”, “social mobility” and “choice” have failed a significant proportion of the working-class population. Moreover, it shows how well anthropology can capture the subtle and complex forms of collectivity through which people find meaning in times of change. Keywords: Br ...
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... 5420. Introduction to Health Services Research. 3 hours. Survey of the history of the development of the field of health services research; the interdisciplinary contributions of the disciplines of sociology, economics, anthropology, gerontology, political science, and public health to the field; an ...
... 5420. Introduction to Health Services Research. 3 hours. Survey of the history of the development of the field of health services research; the interdisciplinary contributions of the disciplines of sociology, economics, anthropology, gerontology, political science, and public health to the field; an ...
Comparing Modern Japan - Toynbee Prize Foundation
... explanation. Even academics cannot sustain surprise when the same discovery is made again and again. The crucial subject for study is rather how such adaptations take place, and that invites comparative analysis in the humanities as well as the social sciences. The range of useful comparisons reache ...
... explanation. Even academics cannot sustain surprise when the same discovery is made again and again. The crucial subject for study is rather how such adaptations take place, and that invites comparative analysis in the humanities as well as the social sciences. The range of useful comparisons reache ...
Rewording the world: poststructuralism, deconstruction and the `real
... synonymous with each other and with ‘deconstruction’. But we have not been able to find any scholars who identify themselves with these positions and agree that they could be conflated to this extent. The positions that these terms signify have very clear affinities with one another but they are cer ...
... synonymous with each other and with ‘deconstruction’. But we have not been able to find any scholars who identify themselves with these positions and agree that they could be conflated to this extent. The positions that these terms signify have very clear affinities with one another but they are cer ...
A new kind of symmetry: Actor-network theories
... mobilisation, deployed by Michel Callon (1986) to describe four 'moments' in the process of translation? Will Mary Hamilton's (2001) account of the networks mobilised through the International Adult Literacy Survev count as an actor-network analysis? Or Simon Pardoe's (2000) application of the princ ...
... mobilisation, deployed by Michel Callon (1986) to describe four 'moments' in the process of translation? Will Mary Hamilton's (2001) account of the networks mobilised through the International Adult Literacy Survev count as an actor-network analysis? Or Simon Pardoe's (2000) application of the princ ...
New Economics: Nature`s Laws
... economy’ reveals that the dialectical development of economic thought from the physiocrats through Marx to the present. It is a broad treatment of the history of intellectual thought that bridges economics and the social sciences on the one hand, with natural science and biology in particular on the ...
... economy’ reveals that the dialectical development of economic thought from the physiocrats through Marx to the present. It is a broad treatment of the history of intellectual thought that bridges economics and the social sciences on the one hand, with natural science and biology in particular on the ...
Critical Race Theory and Education: Mapping a Legacy of Activism
... my children at home and exposing them to black culture and history through other outlets, such as museums and libraries, as well as strong role models in the home and community. Still, I see more clearly than I ever have before how race and power intersect in ways that not only shape my life choices ...
... my children at home and exposing them to black culture and history through other outlets, such as museums and libraries, as well as strong role models in the home and community. Still, I see more clearly than I ever have before how race and power intersect in ways that not only shape my life choices ...
The Nature of Social Reality - Cambridge Scholars Publishing
... have their own specific properties: “the Sosein of an Object is not affected by its Nichtsein.”3 Meinong concludes that “the totality of what exists, including what has existed and will exist, is infinitely small in comparison with the totality of the Objects of knowledge.”4 Similarly, he argues tha ...
... have their own specific properties: “the Sosein of an Object is not affected by its Nichtsein.”3 Meinong concludes that “the totality of what exists, including what has existed and will exist, is infinitely small in comparison with the totality of the Objects of knowledge.”4 Similarly, he argues tha ...
elizabeth a. east - Department of Sociology
... Listserv Moderator, Society for the Study of Social Problems Environment and Technology Division Newsletter Editor, Society for the Study of Social Problems Membership and Outreach Committee, Society for the Study of Social Problems ...
... Listserv Moderator, Society for the Study of Social Problems Environment and Technology Division Newsletter Editor, Society for the Study of Social Problems Membership and Outreach Committee, Society for the Study of Social Problems ...
Spiritual, Moral, Social and Cultural Development of Pupils School`s
... school life. It is whole school development, and not something that is simply covered in RE, PSHE lessons or SEAL. The importance of the SMSC aspects to learning and pupil’s wellbeing were outlined in the 2012 Ofsted Framework for Inspection. All Ofsted lesson observation forms include a section to ...
... school life. It is whole school development, and not something that is simply covered in RE, PSHE lessons or SEAL. The importance of the SMSC aspects to learning and pupil’s wellbeing were outlined in the 2012 Ofsted Framework for Inspection. All Ofsted lesson observation forms include a section to ...
Social Functions — 1 Social functions of emotions at four levels of
... self, patterns of social hierarchy, language, or requirements of socio-economic organization (Lutz & Abu-Lughod, 1990). Social constructions often have consequences, but there is no equivalent to natural selection, selecting the emotional constructions with the best consequences. Rather, socially co ...
... self, patterns of social hierarchy, language, or requirements of socio-economic organization (Lutz & Abu-Lughod, 1990). Social constructions often have consequences, but there is no equivalent to natural selection, selecting the emotional constructions with the best consequences. Rather, socially co ...
Turning the Given into a Question
... pervasive influence of language in structuring both our thought and what we call "reality". It serves to re-member "the fact that such theories are themselves complex 'organized' linguistic arrangements" (p.5). What we know about "organizations" is a product of this organizing process which, to borr ...
... pervasive influence of language in structuring both our thought and what we call "reality". It serves to re-member "the fact that such theories are themselves complex 'organized' linguistic arrangements" (p.5). What we know about "organizations" is a product of this organizing process which, to borr ...
CWP 09-06 soc ontol mkt systems - Dave Elder-Vass
... understandings of market systems depending on which ones form the evidence base for our analysis. As I will argue below, the causal effects of market systems depend at least in part on the institutional context and on the effects that this has on the strategies and indeed the nature of market actors ...
... understandings of market systems depending on which ones form the evidence base for our analysis. As I will argue below, the causal effects of market systems depend at least in part on the institutional context and on the effects that this has on the strategies and indeed the nature of market actors ...