Results 151 to 160 of about 287,072 (291)

African American Children’s Diminished Returns of Subjective Family Socioeconomic Status on Fun Seeking [PDF]

open access: gold, 2020
Shervin Assari   +4 more
openalex   +1 more source

Empowering Adolescents for Sustainable and Inclusive Careers: A Quasi‐Experimental Evaluation of a Life Design‐Based Intervention

open access: yesJournal of Adolescence, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Background Adolescents must plan their educational and occupational futures in a context shaped by globalization, social inequalities, and environmental crises. Although career guidance increasingly emphasizes sustainable and inclusive development, empirical interventions integrating social justice, sustainability, and critical consciousness ...
Sara Santilli   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

Caste as a Social Kind

open access: yesJournal of Applied Philosophy, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Gender and race have received significant philosophical attention recently; they are the paradigm cases of social kinds in most philosophical accounts. I argue for the inclusion of caste as a social kind because it affects the lives of many people, and because it presents itself as an important test case for philosophers of social kinds.
Ajinkya Deshmukh
wiley   +1 more source

Factors Associated with Subjective Successful Aging Among Iranian Older Adults: A Cross-Sectional Analysis

open access: yesIranian Journal of Nursing and Midwifery Research
Background: Subjective Successful Aging (SSA) refers to individuals’ self-rating of their aging process. Demographics, socioeconomic status, and health conditions of older adults can shape their aging process and their self-evaluation of it.
Marzieh Mohamadzadeh   +4 more
doaj   +1 more source

Endothelial Function: The Impact of Objective and Subjective Socioeconomic Status on Flow-Mediated Dilation [PDF]

open access: hybrid, 2010
Denise C. Cooper   +5 more
openalex   +1 more source

Positive Freedom and the Social Meaning of Money

open access: yesJournal of Applied Philosophy, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Semiotic objections to markets hold that buying and selling certain things – for example, sex, body parts, votes, surrogacy services – expresses that those things are fungible with money, which has only profane value. This article offers a more fundamental challenge to semiotic critiques of market.
Andrew Allison   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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