Homo Nationalis and the Moralisation of Belonging: Rethinking National Identity in Austria
ABSTRACT This article examines how national identity and belonging in contemporary Austria are articulated through moral rather than ideological vocabularies. Analysing presidential, party, media and social media discourse surrounding the 2025 National Day, it conceptualises the homo nationalis as the moral citizen who embodies the nation's virtues of ...
Markus Rheindorf
wiley +1 more source
Author stance and engagement in research articles on educational equity: A comparison between Chinese and Australian authors. [PDF]
Li C, Wei R.
europepmc +1 more source
Transforming higher education: Embracing gender diversity for an inclusive future. [PDF]
Govender I, Kaswa R, Nair A.
europepmc +1 more source
Impaired use of function words in European French-speaking children with developmental language disorder. [PDF]
Le Normand MT, Thai-Van H.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Background Cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) offers a relational framework for understanding psychological difficulties, emphasising how early relational and socio‐cultural experiences are internalised and shape the self through a repertoire of reciprocal roles (RRs).
Deborah Charis Bell +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Why do self-referent cues facilitate mathematical word problem-solving? Insights from eye tracking. [PDF]
March JJ +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Joint inquiry requires agents to exchange public content about some target domain, which in turn requires them to track which content a linguistic form contributes to a conversation. But, often, the inquiry delivers a necessary truth. For example, if we are inquiring whether a particular bird, Tweety, is a woodpecker, and discover that it is ...
Una Stojnić, Matthew Stone
wiley +1 more source
"<i>I know who I am</i>": Gender-creative children Draw-and-Tell their social and healthcare experiences. [PDF]
Lenne EL +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Cultural Capture Among Regulators: A Systematic Review
ABSTRACT In established democracies, the threat of regulatory capture—often implicated in major crises—is usually less about financial mechanisms like bribery and more about the subtle social processes of cultural capture. But how exactly is cultural capture defined, theorized, and assessed, and what are its underlying mechanisms, manifestations, and ...
Alexandra M. Chesterfield +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Syntactic change in diachrony versus contact-induced change: two sides of the same coin? [PDF]
D'Alessandro R, Putnam MT, Terenghi S.
europepmc +1 more source

