Fulltext results:
- 11 @1001:2021
- e of something in detail, and see it as part of a larger context. Another term for the colloquial name “f
- 12 @3621:2024
- and (2022) This and next week are new views on a larger problem of difference and the necessity of hetero
- 9 @6901:2024
- tion, informal settlements, and homelessness in a larger, cross-cultural frame (and that considers their r
- 8 @6901:2024
- lity in so-called developed societies, and from a larger perspective, also reveal struggles over different
- the_social_life_of_language @3621:2024
- n-as-event) by three different scholars, and what larger generalization can one make on the basis of this ... This paper is asking you to make an argument for larger generalizations about different cases. Similariti
- 6.1 @1002:2022
- otal economy, people received over US$79 billion, larger than the value of exports in 135 other countries.
- 5.2 @1002:2022
- ally, a principle that determines membership in a larger group or category of people, e.g. Nuer lineages.
- 5.1 @1002:2022
- Everyone who has ever lived was already part of a larger social order, and had ties to other people when t
- 4.1 @1002:2022
- n isolation, and today every society is part of a larger history of the expansion of global capitalism and
- 1.2 @1002:2022
- *learn** how to be who they are. * Seeing the **larger context** for any and every aspect of people’s be
- 13 @2700:2022
- agency of groups, they usually ignore the role of larger social resources that enable the group’s actions.
- 7 @2700:2022
- points near the poles, making northern areas look larger than they are relative to areas around the Equato
- 4 @2700:2022
- is week. Wolf’s ideas are important as part of a larger debate between him and Marshall Sahlins. * Bot
- translation
- domination, Errington argues, as a component of a larger plan to appropriate indigenous ways of speaking a
- society
- ehavior or idea in a society, and placing it in a larger social contexts. That means seeing it as a part of a larger whole. ## Is social theory necessarily pessimis