Results 271 to 280 of about 1,654,322 (297)
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Social Interaction and Social Groups

2008
This chapter presents drug misuse treatment from the perspective of social interaction processes and social group structure. There are many cessation strategies that make use of social processes. For example, sometimes a “motivational intervention” is implemented to confront the drug misuser with his or her detrimental effects on others.
Steve Sussman, Susan L. Ames
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Social Structure and Conflict Groups

2017
Tribes, as opposed to bands, are characterized by a superior mode of production and a superior warrior organization, along with the development of a crucial new social organization, the clan. The superior mode of production includes rudimentary horticulture, or small scale gardening by women, and more successful herd-hunting by the men. There are great
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On the action of social groups

Inquiry, 1976
This paper deals with the question of whether and when it is appropriate or inappropriate to say that a social group performs an action. After some remarks on the concept of action three kinds of groups are distinguished, i.e. assemblies, institutions, and classes.
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The ontology of social groups

Synthese, 2016
Two major questions have dominated work on the metaphysics of social groups: first, Are there any? And second, What are they? I will begin by arguing that the answer to the ontological question is an easy and obvious ‘yes’. We do better to turn our efforts elsewhere, addressing the question: “What are social groups?” One might worry, however, about ...
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Friendships and Social Groups

2003
The social world in which children function is more complex and intricate than adults imagine. It is important to explore this world, so that the complexity of the phenomenon of bullying can be understood.
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Attachment and Social Groups

2014
Bowlby (1982) was the first attachment theorist to note that social groups as well as individuals can become objects of attachment. Bowlby suggests that attachment to social groups starts developing in adolescence and marks a shift in attachment orientation of the young individual from the primary attachment figures to the wider social world.
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Social status in small groups: Individual-group similarity and the social "misfit."

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
Mary Giammarino   +2 more
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The Role of Social Groups

1973
One of the most powerful theories in political science in recent years has been that of totalitarianism and this model of society has been taken to represent the reality of the USSR and States patterned on her. ‘Totalitarianism’ may be defined as a social system which ‘seeks to politicise all human behaviour and plan all human relationships’, its chief
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Schutz on Social Groups

2015
On analogy with the structure of individual selves, e.g., consociates, contemporaries, predecessors, and successors, the structure of collectivities or groups not actually described by Schutz can be discerned that, as concrete, is actually more fundamental than individuals, who are actually abstract.
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Social Groups in Polish Society

The British Journal of Sociology, 1974
D. Lane   +2 more
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