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This book offers a practical, methodological guide to conducting
arts-based research with children by drawing on five years of the
authors' experience carrying out arts-based research with children
in Australia and the UK. Based on the Australian Research
Council-funded Interfaith Childhoods project, the authors describe
methods of engaging communities and making data with children that
foreground children's experiences and worldviews through making,
being with, and viewing art. Framing these methods of doing,
seeing, being, and believing through art as modes of understanding
children's strategies for negotiating personal identities and
values, this book explores the value of arts-based research as a
means of obtaining complex information about children's life worlds
that can be difficult to express verbally.
Experiments in Criminology and Law: A Research Revolution
illustrates how experimental methods, particularly laboratory
experiments, can be useful for researchers studying crime,
deviance, and law. Scholars in these areas have typically relied on
data from surveys, ethnographies, and government records. While
such research has produced evidence regarding correlations, it has
not been as successful at increasing our understanding of the
mechanisms responsible for those correlations. This book makes the
case that laboratory experiments can help. Their strengths
complement those of traditional methods and field experiments.
Already a standard in its first edition, this newly expanded and
reorganized reader provides a compelling exploration of what
arguably remains the single most important problem in social
theory: the problem of social order. Contending that theory's
purpose in the social sciences lies in its ability to explain
real-world phenomena, "Theories of Social Order" presents classic
texts alongside contemporary theoretical extensions and recent
empirical applications.
Building on the success of the first edition, the second edition
focuses readings around five key social structures that affect
social order: individuals, hierarchies, markets, groups, and
networks. Its unique approach--focusing on theor"ies" rather than
theor"ists"--encourages students to compare various factors and
mechanisms, seek common analytical themes, and develop a deeper
theoretical understanding of the problem of social order. By
pairing alternative explanations with empirical research, it helps
students grasp the essential lesson that social theory must have
empirical implications. This critical lesson emphasizes the
relevance of theory to real life, the research enterprise, and the
development of better social policies.
Added readings in the second edition highlight the extent to which
the problem of social order is of interest across the sciences and
demonstrate the relevance of social order in understanding gender
and ethnic group dynamics. Editorial introductions to each section
discuss the causal mechanisms in each theory and make clear links
between classical and modern texts.
"The Rewards of Punishment" describes a new social theory of norms
to provide a compelling explanation why people punish. Identifying
mechanisms that link interdependence with norm enforcement, it
reveals how social relationships lead individuals to enforce norms,
even when doing so makes little sense.
This groundbreaking book tells the whole story, from ideas, to
experiments, to real-world applications. In addition to addressing
longstanding theoretical puzzles--such as why harmful behavior is
not always punished, why individuals enforce norms in ways that
actually hurt the group, why people enforce norms that benefit
others rather than themselves, why groups punish behavior that has
only trivial effects, and why atypical behaviors are sometimes
punished and sometimes not--it explores the implications of the
theory for substantive issues, including norms regulating sex,
crime, and international human rights.
Already a standard in its first edition, this newly expanded and
reorganized reader provides a compelling exploration of what
arguably remains the single most important problem in social
theory: the problem of social order. Contending that theory's
purpose in the social sciences lies in its ability to explain
real-world phenomena, "Theories of Social Order" presents classic
texts alongside contemporary theoretical extensions and recent
empirical applications.
Building on the success of the first edition, the second edition
focuses readings around five key social structures that affect
social order: individuals, hierarchies, markets, groups, and
networks. Its unique approach--focusing on theor"ies" rather than
theor"ists"--encourages students to compare various factors and
mechanisms, seek common analytical themes, and develop a deeper
theoretical understanding of the problem of social order. By
pairing alternative explanations with empirical research, it helps
students grasp the essential lesson that social theory must have
empirical implications. This critical lesson emphasizes the
relevance of theory to real life, the research enterprise, and the
development of better social policies.
Added readings in the second edition highlight the extent to which
the problem of social order is of interest across the sciences and
demonstrate the relevance of social order in understanding gender
and ethnic group dynamics. Editorial introductions to each section
discuss the causal mechanisms in each theory and make clear links
between classical and modern texts.
Experiments in Criminology and Law: A Research Revolution
illustrates how experimental methods, particularly laboratory
experiments, can be useful for researchers studying crime,
deviance, and law. Scholars in these areas have typically relied on
data from surveys, ethnographies, and government records. While
such research has produced evidence regarding correlations, it has
not been as successful at increasing our understanding of the
mechanisms responsible for those correlations. This book makes the
case that laboratory experiments can help. Their strengths
complement those of traditional methods and field experiments.
"The Rewards of Punishment" describes a new social theory of norms
to provide a compelling explanation why people punish. Identifying
mechanisms that link interdependence with norm enforcement, it
reveals how social relationships lead individuals to enforce norms,
even when doing so makes little sense.
This groundbreaking book tells the whole story, from ideas, to
experiments, to real-world applications. In addition to addressing
longstanding theoretical puzzles--such as why harmful behavior is
not always punished, why individuals enforce norms in ways that
actually hurt the group, why people enforce norms that benefit
others rather than themselves, why groups punish behavior that has
only trivial effects, and why atypical behaviors are sometimes
punished and sometimes not--it explores the implications of the
theory for substantive issues, including norms regulating sex,
crime, and international human rights.
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Hyena Road (DVD)
Rossif Sutherland, Allan Hawco, David Richmond-Peck, Karl Campbell, Paul Gross, …
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R107
Discovery Miles 1 070
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Out of stock
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War drama from director Paul Gross, who also stars. Ryan (Rossif
Sutherland), Travis (Allan Hawco), Tank (Karl Campbell) and Hickie
(David Richmond-Peck) together form a Canadian sniper company
engaged in the war in Afghanistan. The film delves into the stories
of the four men and their Intelligence Officer (Gross), who are
tasked with building a road through dense and hostile enemy
territory. The soldiers grapple with the realities of modern
warfare and morality where boundaries between black and white are
often blurred.
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Tarstopping (Paperback)
Christine Horne
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R490
R325
Discovery Miles 3 250
Save R165 (34%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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