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2. The modern confessional: Anglo-American religious groups and the emergence of lay psychotherapy<FNR>1</FNR><FN>This article grew out of a paper presented at a seminar devoted to “Themes in Religious History since 1700,” at Oxford University in June 1998. The author gratefully acknowledges the helpful suggestions of John Barrow, Martin Conway, Jane Garnett, Myfanny Lloyd, Jeffrey McNairn, David Channer of MRA Productions, Robin Mowat, and the anonymous JHBS reviewers regarding the preparation of this manuscript. </FN>
- Author
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Falby, Alison
- Subjects
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SECULARIZATION , *CHURCH & state , *THEOLOGY , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
This article reconceives of secularization as a gradual process of increasing interaction between the (social) scientific and spiritual realms by examining the influence of Christian ideas of group confession on lay psychotherapeutic groups in Britain, Canada, and the U.S. in the early twentieth century. This article focuses on three religious group leaders of the interwar period: Frank Buchman (1878–1961), Gerald Heard (1889–1971), and Henry Burton Sharman (1865–1953). Influenced by Natural Theology and the holiness movement, they placed sin and its redemption within the world, reconceiving it as psychological individualism and its redemption as self-sacrifice to the group. This reconception endorsed the moral power of groups and influenced Alcoholics Anonymous and various groups within the Human Potential Movement. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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3. Emotions and financial risk‐taking in the lab: A meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Marini, Matteo M.
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EMOTIONS ,RISK-taking behavior ,SADNESS ,MONETARY incentives ,HAPPINESS ,ANGER ,RISK aversion - Abstract
This paper is a meta‐analysis of experimental studies dealing with the impact of incidental emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, and anger) on financial risk‐taking, so as to explain traditional heterogeneity of outcomes in the literature. After devising a standard search strategy and including studies that comply with a list of eligibility criteria, we code 114 effect sizes at the treatment level from 26 selected articles, and a battery of moderator variables representing design and sample characteristics. Meta‐regressions with adjusted predictions find causal impact of fear on risk aversion, albeit to a small extent. On the contrary, average null effects characterize happiness, sadness, and anger. It also turns out that when studies provide financial incentives, country‐level individualism moderates the relationship between emotions and risk‐taking by increasing risk propensity. We discuss possible interpretations of our findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. The view of freedom that shaped the Swedish welfare state.
- Author
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Reinikainen, Jouni
- Subjects
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WELFARE state , *REPUBLICANISM , *INDIVIDUALISM , *LIBERTY , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
The paper contributes to the debate of the Swedish welfare state by re‐examining the view of freedom underlying the design of this welfare model. The point of departure is two interpretations by Bo Rothstein and Henrik Berggren and Lars Trägårdh, which both describe advancement of individual autonomy as the ultimate point of the model. The paper argues that these readings are overly liberal in the sense that they exaggerate the importance of individualism and autonomy. The view of freedom that shaped the Swedish welfare state was not liberal, and individual autonomy was not the overriding goal for the founders of the model. Instead, the view is best described as quasi‐republican and nondomination based. It was mostly a result of semi‐Marxist ideas about capitalist power and exploitation that lingered on in the ideology of the Swedish social democratic party, the SAP, in the 1930s and 1940s. During the first decades of the 1900s, the SAP gradually revised these ideas in a domination‐based direction. It was the outcome of this process that more than anything else gave the impetus to the design of the Swedish welfare state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Cultural values, parenting and child adjustment: Introduction to the special issue.
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Lansford, Jennifer E.
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CULTURAL values , *CHILD development , *VALUES (Ethics) , *INDIVIDUALISM , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *FATHER-child relationship - Abstract
This introduction provides an overview of the major constructs that are the focus of this Special Issue. Individualism and collectivism have been the cornerstones of theoretical work on cultural values in psychological science, and conformity is an important component of theories related to motivational values. Individualism, collectivism and conformity values are reviewed in relation to parenting (warmth, knowledge solicitation, rules/limit‐setting, parents' expectations regarding children's family obligations) and children's adjustment (internalising and externalising behaviours). Background on the Parenting Across Cultures project, a study of children, mothers and fathers, in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand and the United States) is provided as a prelude to the country‐specific papers from each of these countries that follow in the rest of the Special Issue before a final concluding paper that focuses on between‐country versus within‐country variation in cultural values, parenting and children's adjustment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Neither individualism nor anti‐individualism: The coevolution of social systems and psychic systems.
- Author
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Guy, Jean‐Sébastien
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SOCIAL systems , *PARADIGMS (Social sciences) , *COEVOLUTION , *TELECOMMUNICATION systems , *SYSTEMS theory - Abstract
Major paradigms in sociology and social sciences usually embrace either individualism or anti‐individualism as fundamental worldview. This paper explores a third way between individualism and anti‐individualism developed by German sociologist Niklas Luhmann in his systems theory. Luhmann treats actors or individuals as psychic systems and he distinguishes them from social systems. In a nutshell, social systems produce communication, whereas psychic systems produce consciousness. In line with anti‐individualism, Luhmann therefore argues that social systems are irreducible to psychic systems and their actions. On the other hand, Luhmann joins ranks with individualism to assert that psychic systems are not rigorously constrained by social systems. Ultimately, Luhmann explains that social systems and psychic systems are part of each other's environment and that each type of systems provides the ecological conditions that the other type depends on to emerge and grow. To discuss this third way between individualism and anti‐individualism, the paper examines more specifically two central points in Luhmann's theory: (1) how social systems and psychic systems are separated from each other, and (2) how social systems and psychic systems are coevolving. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Editorial.
- Author
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Kelly, Tom
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ENLIGHTENMENT ,SPIRITUALITY ,INDIVIDUALISM ,AESTHETICS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology ,PSYCHOANALYTIC interpretation ,ETHNOLOGY research - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the author discusses various reports within the issue including topics on spiritual enlightenment, psychological individualism, and the significance of aesthetic appreciation.
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- 2019
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8. Chief Executive Officer's national culture and bank risk‐taking behavior: International evidence.
- Author
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Luong, Quang Duy, Vo, Duc Hong, and Ho, Chi Minh
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RISK-taking behavior ,CHIEF executive officers ,CULTURE ,POWER (Social sciences) ,BANKING industry - Abstract
This paper examines the effect of the national culture of the chief executive officers (CEOs) on their risk‐taking behavior in managing the banks, leading to banks' instability using a sample of 805 CEOs for 517 commercial banks in 33 countries from 2011 to 2017. Our empirical results confirm that bank risk‐taking behavior is negatively associated with the national culture of the CEOs who score high on the individualistic culture dimension. We also find that bank risk is likely to increase under the management of CEOs coming from high power distance countries. These results have largely remained unchanged across different settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Which dimensions of culture matter for central bank independence? International evidence.
- Author
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Fang, Tong
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RISK aversion ,GOVERNMENT lending ,POWER (Social sciences) ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
In this paper, we examine the relationship between Hofstede national cultures and de jure central bank independence. We propose theoretical hypotheses to explain how cultural dimensions determine central bank independence and test these hypotheses using an international dataset. We find that two cultural dimensions, namely, individualism and uncertainty avoidance, are significantly related to central bank independence. Central bank independence is higher in collectivistic and uncertainty avoidance countries. We further reveal that these cultural dimensions affect central bank independence in different ways. Individualism and uncertainty avoidance are related to independence in policy formulation and limitations on lending to governments. Although power distance and masculinity are insignificantly related to total central bank independence, they affect independence in objectives, policy formulation and limitation on lending to governments. Our results are robust through a series of checks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. 'How the other half lives'?: Taking a critical approach to the social psychology of economic inequality and extreme wealth.
- Author
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Carr, Philippa
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INCOME inequality ,DISCURSIVE psychology ,SOCIAL psychology ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,GROUP identity ,ECONOMIC impact ,NEOLIBERALISM ,WEALTH inequality - Abstract
The negative impact of economic inequality on social issues and wellbeing is of importance to social psychology that historically has an interest in social justice. Social Identity Theory is explored as an approach that acknowledges the wider context of social issues. The use of experiments encounters challenges in categorizing wealth and how individuals account for extreme wealth. Mainstream research agendas in psychology are not neutral and draw upon current ideology (such as neoliberalism) that can often maintain inequality. These difficulties are addressed by Critical Social Psychology driven by a social justice agenda that challenges the acceptance of neoliberal values. The application of Critical Social Psychology to wealth inequality is demonstrated with research using UK media data. Critical feminist psychology is discussed to explore the role of class and how to challenge the stigmatization of working‐class people. Finally, this paper outlines how Discursive Psychology addresses how extreme wealth and the practices of the super‐rich are warranted. A discursive approach questions the acceptance of wealth inequality as an everyday assumption and demonstrates how dominant discourse draws upon individualism. Furthermore, Discursive Psychology has examined how accountability for problematic practices, such as tax avoidance that maintain inequality, are managed in media broadcasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Individualism and Corruption: A Cross-Country Analysis.
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Jha, Chandan and Panda, Bibhudutta
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INDIVIDUALISM ,CORRUPTION ,CROSS-cultural differences ,COLLECTIVISM (Social psychology) ,GENETIC distance - Abstract
While the role of cultural norms in determining corruption is well-explored in the empirical literature, the relationship between a specific aspect of culture, that is, individualism versus collectivism, and corruption is rather unexplored. This paper investigates the relationship between individualism/collectivism and corruption in a large cross-section of countries. To establish causality, the paper uses an index of historical prevalence of infectious diseases and a measure of genetic distance between the population in a country from that in the United States to instrument the individualism/collectivism variable. We find that more individualistic countries have lower levels of corruption (perception). This relationship is robust to the inclusion of a rich set of control variables and to the use of alternative measures of corruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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12. Respect, cognitive capacity, and profound disability.
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DISABILITIES ,HUMANITY ,RESPECT ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
According to one prominent form of moral individualism, how an individual is to be treated is determined, not by considering her group membership, but by considering her own particular characteristics. On this view, so this paper argues, it is not possible to provide an account of why people with profound cognitive disabilities are owed respect. This conclusion is not new, but it has been challenged by writers who are sympathetic to the recommended emphasis. The paper aims to show that the conclusion cannot be avoided, and to look at what is to be learned from an approach that leads us to this point. It suggests that any account of why profoundly disabled people are owed respect will have to supplement discussion of their particular capacities with a normative account of their humanity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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13. Radical plurality on universal grounds.
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Bobrowicz, Ryszard and Gustafsson Lundberg, Johanna
- Abstract
This paper focuses on recent debates between the proponents of individualism and communitarianism. As the authors argue, the dichotomous character of these debates is inherently problematic, as no one functions just as an individual or member. Starting from the discussion around the Netflix series "Unorthodox" in the Swedish context, the authors engage with Sharon Todd's radical conception of plurality, and K.E. Løgstrup's notions of interdependence and the resulting ethical demand to show how these debates could be reframed into the constructive tension between plurality and universality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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14. On List's compatibilist libertarianism.
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Moore, Dwayne and Ugljesic, Sara
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LIBERTARIANISM ,FREE will & determinism ,INDIVIDUALISM ,SELF-control ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Christian List has recently presented a compatibilist libertarian solution to the free will and determinism problem. He proposes the admixture of libertarianism, which endorses agential alternative possibilities, with physical determinism, which endorses the necessity of physical effects. In this paper, we argue that List's innovative proposal ultimately fails. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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15. William James and the Metaphilosophy of Individualism.
- Author
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Rondel, David
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INDIVIDUALISM ,PHILOSOPHERS ,ARGUMENT ,PRAGMATISM - Abstract
This paper argues that an individualist perspective is a crucial element of William James's metaphilosophical outlook. In broad outline, the individualist argument the paper attributes to James can be characterized like this. Disputes among philosophers about the optimal point of view from which to consider this or that philosophical problem are themselves only adequately adjudicated from an individualist perspective. That is, when it comes to an assortment of important philosophical questions (not all of them perhaps, but a significant number), an individualist perspective should replace a more objective one, and whether it should or not is itself a question that should be decided from an individualist perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Reflections on Non‐Imperialist, Feminist Values.
- Author
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Meyers, Diana Tietjens
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FEMINISM ,FEMINISTS ,GENDER ,INDIVIDUALISM ,DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
This paper clarifies and reflects on the four values that Serene Khader argues feminism can do without in Decolonizing Universalism: independence individualism, personhood individualism, Enlightenment freedom, and gender‐role eliminativism. Persuaded by her condemnation of the view Khader calls "headship complementarianism" and her defense of a different form of gender complementarianism, the paper leaves the question of gender role eliminativism aside. It starts by presenting some concerns about her treatment of Enlightenment freedom, independence individualism, and personhood individualism. It agrees that Enlightenment freedom and independence individualism have no place in feminism. Contrary to Khader, however, it maintains that personhood individualism is necessarily a feminist value. It then shows why the value of women's autonomy is more central to non‐imperialist feminism than Khader acknowledges. Ultimately, it agrees with Khader that feminism can be both universalist and non‐imperialist provided that these qualifications are adopted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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17. Can reading practitioners and researchers improve intensive reading support systems in a large urban school system?
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Kearns, Devin M., Walker, Melodee A., Borges, Jason C., and Duffy, Meghan E.
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INDIVIDUALISM ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,META-analysis ,EVIDENCE ,PUBLIC schools - Abstract
One way to provide intensive intervention for students with severe and persistent reading difficulties is to use a systematic data‐based decision‐making process called data‐based individualisation (DBI). DBI is a process for identifying needs and aligning them with specialist support. Meta‐analyses of DBI studies by university‐based researchers have shown positive effects, but university research studies do not involve many of the implementation science‐related factors that affect success. This study addresses the dearth of data from practice‐based studies that incorporate DBI and was done as a researcher–practitioner collaboration, developed with based on the theory that the collaborators' combined knowledge and skills could produce positive outcomes. Mixed methods were used to examine whether there was evidence of success in implementation DBI conducted through a researcher–practitioner partnership in New York City Public Schools, the largest public school system in the United States. Specifically, data were collected concerning the quality of DBI implementation and changes in teachers' and administrators' perspectives about the value of implementing intensive intervention. Results indicated that district‐level implementation met many criteria for effective DBI, that school teams (N = 6) implemented DBI with an overall high level of fidelity (mean score of 4.1 on a 5‐point scale) and that teachers and school administrators changed their thinking about intensive intervention as a result of participation in DBI. Stakeholder interview data indicated a high level of social acceptability for DBI implementation. Features of the research–practice partnership thought to have contributed to the success of the project are discussed. Highlights: What is already known about this topicData‐based individualisation (DBI) is an effective system for supporting students with intensive academic needs. Implementation science indicates that specific drivers affect success (Fixsen et al., 2017). The efficacy of researcher–practitioner partnerships is unclear. What this paper addsDBI was successful in a large‐district context with evidence of changes in teacher attitudes and instructional practices. Success may have been associated with school readiness to begin DBI, access to materials, strong initial professional learning and effective school‐team systems. The partners' complementary skills and their culture of reciprocity contributed to the partnership's success. Implications for theory, policy and practicePractitioners and researchers can work together to implement DBI successfully – even in large, complex school systems, but this requires that the partners have complementary skills and a culture of reciprocity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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18. A structuralist interpretation of the relational interpretation.
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QUANTUM mechanics ,STRUCTURALISM ,THEORY of knowledge ,INDIVIDUALISM ,REALISM - Abstract
The present paper aims to provide an insight into the epistemological and metaphysical implications of a structuralist interpretation of Relational Quantum Mechanics (RQM). I will suggest that the 'entity‐relation identity' at the core of a particular formulation of Ontic Structural Realism represents the best framework against which to understand RQM, and, in turn, that this interpretation provides some support for the adoption of a structuralist viewpoint in Quantum Mechanics thus understood. The choice is motivated by the same revisionary metaphysics they both seem to offer, with respect to the notion of entity and of relation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. The associations of cultural worldviews, political orientation, and trust with COVID‐19 risk beliefs in the U.S.
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Cheng, Ivy, Taber, Jennifer M., Simonovic, Nicolle, Coifman, Karin G., Sidney, Pooja G., Was, Christopher A., and Thompson, Clarissa A.
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POLITICAL affiliation , *TRUST , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COVID-19 , *WORLDVIEW , *ENGAGEMENT (Philosophy) - Abstract
Given that risk beliefs predict engagement in behaviors to prevent disease, it is important to understand the factors associated with risk beliefs. In the present paper, we conducted path analyses to investigate the associations of belief systems (political orientation and cultural worldviews of individualism and hierarchy) with COVID‐19 risk beliefs (i.e., perceived likelihood, perceived severity, and worry about disease; Studies 1 and 2), and the indirect effect through trust in information sources in these relationships (Study 1). Two online panels of U.S. adults were surveyed at three timepoints during the COVID‐19 pandemic (Study 1: baseline n = 1,667, 1‐year follow‐up n = 551; Study 2: n = 404). Results of path analyses indicated that, across studies and timepoints, when controlling for political orientation, trust, and demographic factors, greater individualism had consistent significant direct effects on lower perceived severity and worry about COVID‐19, whereas greater hierarchy had consistent significant direct effects on lower perceived severity. However, after accounting for cultural worldviews of individualism and hierarchy (and trust and demographic factors), none of the associations among political orientation and any of the three COVID‐19 risk beliefs were significant. The test of indirect effects indicated that individualism and hierarchy were indirectly associated with lower perceived severity of and worry about COVID‐19 through less trust. The findings suggest that cultural worldviews of individualism and hierarchy play a role in shaping people's risk beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Working class educational transitions to university: The limits of success.
- Author
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Reay, Diane
- Subjects
WORKING class ,INDIVIDUALISM ,SOCIAL marginality ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Educational transitions experienced within a context of wide and growing inequalities such as England result in very different transition experiences to those experienced by young people growing up in relatively equitable societies with strong communal links. Transitions of working class young people in England are beset with competition, individualism and low expectations. Employing Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of habitus, capital and field, the article argues that working class transitions to university reveal the failure of the English educational system to provide anything like a level playing field to support working class young people who are seen to be educational successes. Focusing on those working class young people who are particularly successful by gaining access to elite universities the paper argues that even this small select group face discrimination, set‐backs, and a degree of social exclusion. The paper concludes that the vast majority of working class young people, including many of those who are the most academically successful have very different transitions to higher education, and experiences within it, from their middle and upper class peers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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21. Natural goodness without natural history.
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NATURAL history ,INDIVIDUALISM ,EVALUATION ,TELEOLOGY ,SYMMETRY (Physics) - Abstract
Neo‐Aristotelian ethical naturalism purports to show that moral evaluation of human action and character is an of evaluation of natural goodness—a kind of evaluation that applies to living things in virtue of their nature and based on their form of life. The standard neo‐Aristotelian view defines natural goodness by way of generic statements describing the natural history, or the 'characteristic' life, of a species. In this paper, I argue that this conception of natural goodness commits the neo‐Aristotelian view to a problematic anti‐individualism that results in the wrong assessment of individuals with uniquely adaptive adjustments. I then offer an alternative account of natural goodness that avoids this problem. Instead of relying on generic statements about a species, my account defines natural goodness based on counterfactual conditionals describing the modal properties of a single individual. I argue that this modal‐explanatory account gives a conception of natural goodness that is more intuitively plausible and better suited to capture the diversity and plasticity distinctive of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Post‐Fascists: Putting the So‐Called "Populist Right" into Historical Perspective.
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FASCISTS ,RIGHT-wing populism ,RIGHT-wing extremism ,LAW enforcement ,GEOGRAPHIC boundaries ,INDIVIDUALISM ,PLURALISM - Abstract
Authoritarians are back: Demanding the restoration of community against formalized society and of tradition against the stranger; asking for strong states enforcing law and order, closing borders, preventing dark men from threatening white women; defending traditional family models against individualism and gender‐pluralism; claiming to represent "the people." Today many denounce them as "Fascists!". This article tries to conceptually capture the recent developments in two countries, France and Germany. In both cases, a diachronic comparison seems tempting. Are the '30s ahead of us? What is the extent and what is the impact of the fascist legacy today? The comparison in this article is based on Mann's book "Fascists" (2004). The paper argues that while the current far‐right cannot be considered fascist anymore and resembles interwar fascism only remotely, we have to consider it post‐fascist. If interwar fascism is largely explicable out of a context of multilevel crises to which it provided answers that many found convincing, I conclude that the current strength of the German and French far‐right does happen in a rather moderate crisis context to which it provides some answers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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23. How the media construct happiness under cultural perspective in China: Through collectivistic and individualistic values.
- Author
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Su, Zhenhua, Zhou, Qian, Ye, Yanyu, and Li, Dongxiao
- Subjects
HAPPINESS ,FREEDOM of speech ,SOCIAL comparison ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,STREAMING video & television ,TELEVISION viewing ,TELEVISION viewers - Abstract
Objective: The attributes affecting happiness include endogenous material factors such as income and social comparison, and exogenous cultural factors like individual values and national ideology. And the latter is greatly affected by media in China. This study seeks to explore the influence path of media construction on happiness under cultural perspective in China. Methods: Using Chinese General Social Survey 2015 data, we apply the ordered logit model to calculate the influence of the usage of television and Internet on happiness conspicuously. Results: The use of television and Internet both have positive influence on happiness, and the influence path is that state media shapes collectivism and Internet shapes individualism. As the state‐controlled media in China, television continuously promotes nationalism and patriotism, thus strengthens audience's collectivistic value. Meanwhile, Internet which enjoys certain speech freedom in China boosts the user's individualistic value which makes a difference in promoting happiness. Conclusion: The U‐shaped effect of "collectivism‐individualism" on happiness found in this paper empirically illustrates that collectivistic and individualistic values can both facilitate happiness, and also further shows that television and Internet can enhance happiness by influencing cultural values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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24. Applying a 'harm to others' research framework to illicit drugs: political discourses and ambiguous policy implications.
- Author
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Wilkinson, Claire and Ritter, Alison
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PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL stigma ,LANGUAGE & languages ,PARADIGMS (Social sciences) ,RISK assessment ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DRUGS of abuse - Abstract
During the past decade, 'alcohol's harm to others' (AHTO) has emerged as an international approach to studying alcohol problems and informing policy. The AHTO approach seeks to increase political will for alcohol policy by mapping, measuring and often costing harms beyond the person who drinks (e.g. family members, co‐workers). In this paper we consider the implications of a 'harm to others' approach for illicit drugs. We ask whether it could and should be used as a policy tool, given the high risks of further stigmatizing people who use drugs. We consider the ways in which the concept and measurement of 'harm to others' may be either productive or potentially harmful, depending on the extent to which the AHTO is replicated for illicit drugs. Shifting the language may assist: the term 'harm from others' appears to carry less risk of stigma. In addition, all harms inclusive of drug supply and drug consumption need to be included if a full picture of harms that accrue to other people from illicit drugs is to be achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Problematising the use of education to address social inequity: Could participatory action research be a step forwards?
- Author
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Giannakaki, Marina‐Stefania, McMillan, Ian David, and Karamichas, John
- Subjects
COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SOCIAL justice ,SOCIAL problems ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
This paper critiques international trends towards certain school practices aimed at promoting equity and social justice by closing gaps in specific learning outcomes among students. It argues that even though some of these practices (e.g. individualised student support, data‐driven leadership) improve learning outcomes for certain groups considered ‘disadvantaged’, they fail to have a genuine impact on the issue. They remain ‘locked’ in the logic of social mobility, reaffirming the legitimacy of a hierarchical system underpinned by competitive individualism, which unfairly distributes social opportunities under the guise of ‘merit’ and ‘justice’. The paper argues that unless students develop awareness of the subtle injustices legitimised by the current system, no specialised interventions will ever tackle inequity, but will, instead, reinforce it. Yet, attempts to explicitly challenge mainstream school practices are likely to face harsh resistance from system agents due to being so ingrained in school cultures. An alternative strategy is suggested which, without being too subversive, could raise students’ awareness—what Freire called ‘conscientização’. This would entail the application of participatory action research (PAR), under the cloak of traditional (system‐aligned) action research. Such PAR, despite its political character, would initially appear to fulfil the performative role of more technical interventions (e.g. raising test scores), but in such a way that ‘conscientização’ also happens in the process. This may set the ground for social reform, encouraging the transition to a more sustainable and equitable society based on collectivity and solidarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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26. Interdependent Kin in Māori Marine Environments.
- Author
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McCormack, Fiona
- Subjects
MAORI (New Zealand people) ,FISHERY management ,FISHERIES ,SOCIAL hierarchies ,INDIVIDUALISM ,KINSHIP ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) - Abstract
This paper explores ascriptions of dependence and independence in Māori marine environments alongside the entrenchment of colonial constructions of hierarchical kinship organisation. The modelling of independence on liberal understandings of individualism is apparent in the development of the Treaty of Waitangi settlement of Māori commercial fisheries, wherein attributes of self‐reliance enabled through accumulation prevail. This articulates with a fisheries management regime whose logic is grounded in neoliberal market environmentalism, exacerbating tensions between iwi and hapū, two different levels of tribal organisation. The contemporary power ascribed to iwi, however, is more tempered than supposed, and the fluidity of hierarchical kin group positionings, noted in historical accounts, is still in existence today. Interdependence is historically continuous. It is expressed in the social relations embedded in cognatic kinship, marine tenures as well as kincentric ecologies and is inclusive of ancestors and fish species. The current claims of Māori to tribal seascapes are interpreted as an expression of interrelationships of stewardship, as a response to environmental demise and as a challenge to emergent social hierarchies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Kotahitanga and koinonia in shalom as the objective of the mission of God.
- Author
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Matenga, Jay
- Subjects
EVANGELICALISM ,GOD ,GOODNESS of God ,GLOBAL North-South divide ,MISSIOLOGY ,CONCORD ,INDIVIDUALISM ,JOY - Abstract
Evangelical theology and the missions that flowed from it was born in an era of high colonialism, shaped by enlightenment dualism and scientific method, under the influence of industrialization. As evangelical Christianity's centre of gravity shifted south, global North dominance over its theology and missiology persisted, translated into new tongues. This paper, sensing a tipping point in evangelical thought as we emerge out of global pandemic disruption, proposes an alternative framing of church and missions from the collectivist perspective shared by those less affected by the influence of Western industrialization and individualism. It proposes that both the means and the objective of the mission of God should be common unity in‐Christ. It shifts focus from the Great Commission to the Great Commitment, which emphasizes being one and holding fast to that unity for the joy that awaits those who persevere in mutuality. Along the way, the demonstration of whole‐of‐life covenantal community in‐Christ serves as our witness to the world, which provides those of us in‐Christ with an opportunity to explain the hope that we have and invite others to join us in the experience of God's shalom goodness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Animalism and the Persistence of Human Organisms.
- Author
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Dupré, John
- Subjects
HUMAN beings ,ANIMALS ,INDIVIDUALISM ,ORGANISMS ,LIFE (Biology) - Abstract
Humans are a kind of animal, and it is a natural and sensible idea that the way to understand what it is for a human person to persist over time is to reflect on what it is for an animal to persist. This paper accepts this strategy. However, especially in the light of a range of recent biological findings, the persistence of animals turns out to be much more problematic than is generally supposed. The main philosophical premise of the paper is that living systems generally are best treated as processes rather than things. These processes prove to be so complexly intertwined and interdependent, that there is no unique, objective way of distinguishing the individuals from which they are composed. For this reason the animalist perspective, it is argued, problematizes as much as it resolves the problem of personal identity. Traditional concerns with responsibility and reactive attitudes provide an intelligible and defensible motivation for distinguishing the individuals we standardly assume as the explanandum in these discussions. But, from a biological point of view, the underlying individualism is a contingent perspective, as much justified by these concerns as providing an objective grounding for them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. WHY EUROPE? A CRITIQUE OF INSTITUTIONALIST AND CULTURALIST ECONOMICS.
- Author
-
Khalil, Elias L.
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,PERFORMANCE evaluation ,INDIVIDUALISM ,CULTURE ,BELIEF & doubt ,SOCIAL institutions - Abstract
Economists have recently started to discuss the roles of institutions and cultural beliefs in explaining the performance of civilizations. This paper investigates two views, 'institutionalist economics' and 'culturalist economics', with regard to the question of why Europe rose economically a few centuries ago, while other regions of the world lagged behind. These two views share a common platform raised on two pillars. First, both regard institutions/beliefs as extra-economic - as primordial entities that ultimately stand independent of economic performance. Second, both regard economic performance as fully determined by institutions/beliefs - i.e. normative causality in the sense that institutions/beliefs determine performance. analysis of economic performance, for example, is based on both pillars. Concerning the primordial pillar, he attributes 'the mystery' of the rise of Europe to primordial beliefs, viz. 'Christian dogma' and English 'individualism'. Concerning the normative pillar, he presumes that such beliefs have almost one-to-one correspondence with economic performance. This paper, though, maintains that the two pillars (primordial analysis and normative causality) are rather fragile: Advocates of the first pillar fail to recognize that institutions/beliefs are endogenous. Advocates of the second pillar fail to recognize that institutions/beliefs can give rise to diverse economic performances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. How individualism–collectivism influences consumer responses to the sharing economy: Consociality and promotional type.
- Author
-
Mai, Shirley, Ketron, Seth, and Yang, Jun
- Subjects
INDIVIDUALISM ,COLLECTIVISM (Social psychology) ,CONSUMER attitudes ,SHARING economy ,COMMODITY exchanges ,ELECTRONIC commerce ,INTENTION - Abstract
With the explosion of online exchange of products, the sharing economy is experiencing ever‐increasing growth. Despite the increasing popularity of lateral exchange market platforms as part of the sharing economy, research has not yet adequately investigated cultural effects on how consumers' intentions to purchase products on these platforms. Using two studies, this paper examines whether consumers high in individualism versus consumers high in collectivism respond differently to platforms with low versus high consociality and how individualistic and collectivistic consumers respond differently to two types of promotions that relate to self‐maximization. Findings in Study 1 indicated that consumers high in individualism (collectivism) have higher patronage intentions toward a platform low (high) in consociality. Findings in Study 2 suggested that in the presence of a promotion, collectivistic consumers respond comparably to promotional types across platforms, whereas individualistic consumers respond more positively to collective (individual) promotions when consociality is low (high). Further, felt commitment to others as a result of the consociality/promotional type relationship explains these effects. Theoretical and managerial implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. I (do not) consume; therefore, I am: Investigating materialism and voluntary simplicity through a moderated mediation model.
- Author
-
Kuanr, Abhisek, Pradhan, Debasis, and Chaudhuri, Himadri Roy
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,SIMPLICITY ,MEDIATION (Statistics) ,CONSUMER culture ,COUNTERCULTURE - Abstract
With the burgeoning of consumer culture and materialism on a global scale, a counter‐culture movement, namely, voluntary simplicity, is slowly gaining currency. Extant research reveals a degree of disparateness in the relationship between materialism and voluntary simplicity. Drawing on the value‐basis theory and anti‐consumption research, the current study attempts at an unorthodox study of the fledgling culture of anti‐consumption in urban India. The paper empirically examines the relationship between materialism and voluntary simplicity in India. This research, through an experimental study followed by a sample survey, conducted among urban Indian consumers, examines how satisfaction with life, self‐efficacy, and individualism interact with materialistic values to eventually influence voluntary simplicity attitudes. In Study 1 (N = 74 working professionals), we experimentally triggered materialistic aspirations and evaluated their effects on voluntary simplicity in comparison to a control condition. In Study 2 (N = 315), individuals self‐rated their materialistic values, satisfaction with life, self‐efficacy, cultural orientation, and voluntary simplicity attitude. Our study, contrary to the suggestions in the existing literature, demonstrates that materialists espouse voluntary simplicity attitudes when environmental degradation around them directly impacts their health, wealth, and well‐being. In addition to the positive direct effect, satisfaction with life and self‐efficacy serially mediate the relationship between materialism and voluntary simplicity, providing a welcome divergence from dark‐sided conceptualizations of materialism. Our results help global marketers, and public policymakers better understand the interaction between materialistic values and sustainable consumption attitudes, in the developing country perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. INDIVIDUALIZATION AND PUBLIC SECTOR LEADERSHIP.
- Author
-
LAWLER, JOHN
- Subjects
LEADERSHIP ,INDIVIDUALISM ,DECISION making in public administration ,PUBLIC administration research ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
This is a conceptual paper whose aim is to relate the development of ‘individualization’ ( Beck and Beck-Gernsheim 2002 ) to organizational leadership. It does this by examining individualization alongside the implicit assumption on which orthodox approaches to leadership are founded, namely that leadership is an individualized phenomenon. Despite the expanding literature on these topics, particularly that on leadership, these concepts have not been examined in relation to one another. This paper seeks to do this in two ways. Firstly, it highlights the increased attention given to leadership in the UK public sector, locating leadership as a continuation of public sector managerialism. Secondly, it discusses the development of the trend of individualization more broadly. The paper’s main discussion focuses on leadership as an individual activity and of the consequences of that approach. In particular, it argues that individualized leadership presents a restrictive perspective which does not allow for exploration of a broader range of leadership approaches, particularly that of distributed leadership, which have especial relevance for public sector organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. AGAINST LEWIS'S NEW THEORY OF CAUSATION: A STORY WITH THREE MORALS.
- Author
-
Strevens, Michael
- Subjects
CAUSATION (Philosophy) ,PHILOSOPHY ,METAPHYSICS ,PHILOSOPHERS ,INDIVIDUALISM ,DEBATE - Abstract
A recent paper by David Lewis, "Causation as Influence", provides a new theory of causation. This paper presents an argument against the theory, using a series of counterexamples that are, I think, of independent interest to philosophers of causation. I argue that (a) the relation asserted by a claim of the form "C was a cause of E" is distinct from the relation of causal influence, (b) the former relation depends very much, contra Lewis, on the individuation conditions for the event E, and (c) Lewis's account is unsatisfactory as an analysis of either kind of relation. The counterexamples presented in this paper provide, I suggest, some insight into the reasons for the failure of counterfactual accounts of causal relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. MANAGING DISCURSIVE TENSION: THE CO-EXISTENCE OF INDIVIDUALIST AND COLLABORATIVE DISCOURSES IN FLIGHT CENTRE.
- Author
-
Palmer, Ian and Dunford, Richard
- Subjects
CONFLICT management ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,ORGANIZATIONAL structure ,INDIVIDUALISM ,MANAGEMENT of teams in the workplace ,COLLECTIVISM (Social psychology) ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL relations ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Our study of the travel agency Flight Centre began as a case study of a company that appears to be a 'success story' in what is a highly competitive industry. In the course of our study we found that inscribed in Flight Centre were two, differing discourses which appear to co-exist in creative tension throughout the organization. One discourse is competitive individualism and the other collaborative teamwork. Our paper focuses on how Flight Centre has made use of multiple discourses such as these in the process of achieving competitive advantage, and how people manage the differing discursive logics which confront them on a day-to-day basis. The paper proceeds by identifying the social and textual practices which constitute each discourse. It then establishes the discursive co-existence and tension which exists between the two discourses. Study is made of the conditions under which this discursive co-existence is disrupted. We then identify the interpretative routines and practices through which organizational actors maintain and reproduce discursive co-existence. Our paper concludes by considering a variety of implications of studying multiple discourses in organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Reforming men: Pentecostalism and masculinity in Papua New Guinea.
- Author
-
Eves, Richard
- Subjects
PENTECOSTALISM ,MASCULINITY ,PENTECOSTALS ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
The basic premise of this paper is that oppressive and violent behaviour is not an essential aspect of the male identity. Seeking to comprehend the underlying causes of violence, specifically against women but also more generally, this paper examines some of the alternative ways of being a man that have accompanied Christianity. Through observation of some Pentecostals from New Ireland, I have concluded that new ways of being a man that are less oppressive and dominating for women are emerging. This phenomenon I argue is a step towards gender equality, since it involves creating more caring and equitable relationships and a step towards reducing violence both against women and in the community, since it embraces non-violent ways of being a man. Particularly useful in analysing the process of reforming men is Foucault's work on governmentality since it relates well to the Pentecostal emphasis on radical change in being 'born again'. Conversion for born-again Christians is more than simply abandoning sin; rather it involves the creation of a new self and becoming a new person. Similarly, Foucault argues that the individual practises the art of self-governance in re-forming her or himself as she or he desires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Testing the Cultural Theory of Risk in France.
- Author
-
Brenot, Jean, Bonnefous, Sylviane, and Marris, Claire
- Subjects
INDIVIDUALISM ,SOCIOLOGY ,RISK perception ,FATE & fatalism ,HUMAN behavior - Abstract
Cultural Theory, as developed by Mary Douglas, argues that differingrisk perceptions can be explained by reference to four distinct cultural biases: hierarchy, egalitarianism, individualism, and fatalism. This paper presents empirical results from a quantitative survey based on a questionnaire devised by Karl Dake to measure these cultural biases. A large representative sample (N = 1022) was used to test thisinstrument in the French social context. Correlations between cultural biases and perceptions of 20 social and environmental risks were examined. These correlations were very weak, but were statistically significant: cultural biases explained 6%, at most, of the variance in risk perceptions. Standard sociodemographic variables were also weakly related to risk perceptions (especially gender, social class, and education), and cultural biases and sociodemographic variables were themselves inter correlated (especially with age, social class, and political outlook). The authors compare these results with surveys conducted in other countries using the same instrument and conclude that new methods, more qualitative and contextual, still need to be developed to investigate the cultural dimensions of risk perceptions. The paper also discusses relationships between perceptions of personal and residual risk, and between perceived risk and demand for additional safety measures. These three dimensions were generally closely related, but interesting differences were observed for some risk issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Guanxi bases, xinyong and Chinese business networks.
- Author
-
Tong Chee Kiong and Yong Pit Kee
- Subjects
INTERPERSONAL relations ,JOB hunting ,SOCIAL networks ,BUSINESS networks ,INDIVIDUALISM ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior - Abstract
This paper, based on fieldwork conducted in Singapore and Malaysia, examines the social foundations and organizational principles of Chinese business finns, focusing in particular, on the inclination to incorporate personal relationships in decision making. It identifies three key aspects of personalism: personal control, personal guanxi relationships, and interpersonal trust or xinyong. Personal control is effected largely through depending on people whom one personally trusts as this would reduce risks and afford better business control. The paper also examines the dynamics between guanxi and xinyong, and how these ideals are played out in reality. A central argument is that economic decisions are not based solely on market considerations. Rather, they are embedded in the context of larger social relations and institutional forces which shape, reinforce, as well as challenge, a set of behaviours or organizational structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Unemployment: what kind of problem is it?
- Author
-
Drewery, Wendy
- Subjects
UNEMPLOYMENT ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIAL problems ,POSTSTRUCTURALISM ,MODERN philosophy ,TWENTIETH century ,INDIVIDUALISM ,SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
This paper uses poststructuralist ideas to describe aspects of the battle to retain personal power of one mother of four late adolescent children, when she became unemployed during the restructuring of the New Zealand economy, which began in 1984 and continues in the present. A deconstructive analysis of the text of unstructured interviews with Sonya shows how agencies of the State, including the Welfare, gradually increase their practices of surveillance over her domestic life and reduce her options for agentic action in public life. These practices are linked to an analysis of discourses of economic rationalism and liberal humanism to show that this insidious exclusion and regulation is underpinned by ‘possessive individualism’—a model of the person/citizen who has rights to speak in the public sphere insofar as he/she owns property. It is argued that this model of personhood, which pervades much community psychology, at the same time devalues both the traditional work of women and forms of non-material productivity which can be characterized as human service. The paper claims that the discursive approach can help to avoid disrespectful implications of deficit in people whose voices are silenced by dominant discourses, including those which dominate much psychological theorizing. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. CORPORATE CULTURE: THE LAST FRONTIER OF CONTROL.
- Author
-
Ray, Carol Axtell
- Subjects
CORPORATE culture ,DURKHEIMIAN school of sociology ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,MANAGEMENT styles ,ACTIVISM ,HEGEMONY ,QUALITATIVE research ,DIVISION of labor ,INDIVIDUALISM ,CONTROL (Psychology) - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the present U.S. use of the concept of 'corporate culture' using the sociology of Emile Durkheim as a conceptual framework. Durkheim was concerned with understanding where potential sources of morality might reside in a rapidly changing, increasingly differentiated society. Proponents of corporate culture do not rely specifically on Durkheim's work but essentially answer his question by suggesting that the corporation is the appropriate site for moral order. In this paper it is argued that the attempted manipulation of a corporation's culture is simply an addition to other forms of control which companies have tried to implement. More than other forms of control, however, corporate culture elicits sentiment and emotion, and contains possibilities to ensnare workers in a hegemonic system. On the other hand, strengthening corporate cultures in the U.S.A may also lead to increased worker homogenization and activism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Leadership development in Higher Education: A literature review and implications for programme redesign.
- Author
-
Dopson, Sue, Ferlie, Ewan, McGivern, Gerry, Fischer, Michael D., Mitra, Mahima, Ledger, Jean, and Behrens, Sonja
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,HUMAN capital ,INDIVIDUALISM ,INFORMATION & communication technologies - Abstract
Leadership development (LD) activity and its effectiveness has not been explored rigorously across changing university settings globally. As Higher Education settings change radically throughout the world, Higher Education professionals are operating in more uncertain environments, and leaders are taking increasingly complex and diverse approaches to their leadership roles. LD activities therefore become important in supporting this highly complex context, yet little is known in the literature about LD and its impact in Higher Education. We examine peer‐reviewed work on LD in Higher Education settings globally to understand what may be learned about its content, processes, outcomes and impact. Our results suggest the current literature is small‐scale, fragmented and often theoretically weak, with many different and coexisting models, approaches and methods, and little consensus on what may be suitable and effective in the Higher Education context. We reflect on this state of play and develop a novel theoretical approach for designing LD activity in Higher Education institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Motivations to Contribute to Public Goods: Beyond rational choice economics.
- Author
-
Popa, Florin
- Subjects
PUBLIC goods ,INTRINSIC motivation ,RATIONAL choice theory ,INDIVIDUALISM ,INSTRUMENTALISM (Philosophy) ,MARKET equilibrium - Abstract
The dominant understanding of how motivations to contribute to public goods are generated and sustained is largely shaped by the combined action of rational choice theory and neoclassical economics. This understanding relies on three key assumptions: individualism, instrumentalism and market equilibration. This paper questions the theoretical consistency and empirical relevance of these assumptions and of their associated policy model. I argue that a significant revision of this motivational theory is needed, one that takes into account intrinsic incentives, trust and strong reciprocity, as well as the effect of social and institutional context, monetization and market interactions on the propensity to contribute to public goods. The paper concludes by outlining the implications of this theoretical reconsideration for the organization of scientific research and for more effective policy-making to sustain public goods provision. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Understanding Ethnicity and National Culture: A Theoretical Perspective on Knowledge Management in the Organization.
- Author
-
Khan, Shazia Rehman and Khan, Iram A.
- Subjects
KNOWLEDGE management ,ETHNICITY ,INDUSTRIAL management ,CULTURAL values ,INDIVIDUALISM ,RISK aversion - Abstract
The focus of this research is to relate ethnicity and its effect on national cultural values. The paper points out how the ethnic and economic reasons for conflict influence this interaction that creates barriers in the knowledge management processes in an organization. Theoretical model is predicated on two structural dimensions of ethnicity: ethnic boundary and ethnic competition, which are then related to the national cultural values of individualism, masculinity, power distance, and uncertainty avoidance. The cultural values of long-term versus short-term orientation and indulgence versus restraint are not included in the conceptualization as the first one is rarely used because of its inclination toward Confucian ethic, whereas the second is found to be more or less complementary to long-term versus short-term orientation. In the paper, prejudice and limited absorptive capacity are identified as the first-level effects, which, consequentially, produce the barriers of knowledge hoarding and knowledge stickiness during the course of knowledge transference in an organization. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. American on Everest: Individualism, the American Intellectual Tradition, and the Dream of Woodrow Wilson Sayre.
- Author
-
Sutch, Christopher
- Subjects
MOUNTAINEERING ,INDIVIDUALISM ,AMERICAN transcendentalism ,MOUNTAINS in literature ,TWENTIETH century ,NINETEENTH century ,INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This article identifies the American philosophical antecedents that informed Woodrow Wilson Sayre's failed attempt to climb Mount Everest in 1962. Sayre, a philosophy professor at Tufts University, was an extreme proponent of individualism and saw the challenge of climbing Everest as a struggle of one man against cold, 'antiseptic' Nature. In his writings on the subject Sayre uses some of the same cultural notions about humanity and mountains that were current in American intellectual culture during the 19
th century. The paper traces these notions from the Transcendentalists and American poetic descriptions of mountains through to Sayre's writings. The paper ends by describing the official response to Sayre's expedition as revealed in archival sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The role of task meaning on output in groups: Experimental evidence.
- Author
-
Bäker, Agnes and Mechtel, Mario
- Subjects
PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,TASK performance ,WORK environment ,INDIVIDUALISM ,PEERS - Abstract
Previous research has shown a detrimental effect of low task meaning on individual work output. This paper analyzes whether peer settings are able to counteract this negative effect of low task meaning. First, our results confirm that a low level of task meaning decreases individual output when working alone. However, this effect vanishes completely when working in the presence of a peer. Our analysis implies that organizing work in peer settings might be particularly beneficial in work environments with a low level of task meaning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. ANALYTICAL MARXISM.
- Author
-
Veneziani, Roberto
- Subjects
SURVEYS ,INDIVIDUALISM ,RATIONAL choice theory ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC structure ,MARXIST philosophy in literature ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This paper provides a comprehensive survey of the literature on Analytical Marxism (AM) and analyses its relevance for social theory. AM is precisely defined and distinguished from Rational Choice Marxism (RCM). The different substantive implications of the two approaches are discussed: according to RCM, the role of Marxism in the social sciences is exhausted, whereas AM has reconstructed a set of propositions that aim to provide the foundations of a distinctive approach in social theory. The methodological debate around and within AM is analysed and the shortcomings of methodological individualism and rational choice theory are stressed, raising doubts on the claim that RCM is the only scientific approach to Marx's theory. Yet, wholesale rejections on a priori methodological or exegetical grounds are questioned. A focused, immanent critique of RCM is developed, which emphasizes the lack of an adequate analysis of structural constraints and endogenous preferences in RCM models. It is argued that the analysis of endogenous preferences and structural constraints is consistent with an anti-reductionist AM approach and it may provide the outline of a fertile, distinctive research programme in explanatory social theory that builds on the core of Marxism identified by AM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Knowledge and Identity: A Review.
- Author
-
Gao, YingFei and Riley, Michael
- Subjects
KNOWLEDGE transfer ,GROUP identity ,PLURALISM ,INDIVIDUALISM ,SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
This paper reviews the literature in a number of areas that converge upon the theme of the role of knowledge within professional identity. Within knowledge transfer literature the individual perspective is underdeveloped, and this paper seeks to contribute by exploring the function of knowledge within an individual's professional identity, thus unfolding a theoretical connection between the literatures of knowledge and identity. Its central argument concurs with Szulanski's notion of ‘internal stickiness’ as a barrier to knowledge transfer but extends this hypothesis into the psychological ownership of knowledge and to the idea of ‘possessiveness’. The paper argues that the value of self-categorized knowledge places the latter within the individual's cognitive structure of their identity. It offers up the idea of valued knowledge to the knowledge transfer domain and suggests that feelings of possessiveness towards knowledge may intervene in the willingness of an individual to disclose knowledge in a knowledge transfer process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Relationality and social interaction.
- Author
-
Bottero, Wendy
- Subjects
SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIAL capital ,HABITUS (Sociology) ,INTERSUBJECTIVITY ,INDIVIDUALISM - Abstract
This paper explores Bourdieu's account of a relational social space, and his relative neglect of social interaction within this framework. Bourdieu includes social capital as one of the key relational elements of his social space, but says much less about it than economic or cultural capital, and levels of social capital are rarely measured in his work. Bourdieu is reluctant to focus on the content of social networks as part of his rejection of substantialist thinking. The neglect of substantive networks creates problems for Bourdieu's framework, because many of Bourdieu's core concepts rest upon assumptions about their interactional properties (in particular, the prevalence of homophilous differential association) which are left unexamined. It is argued here that Bourdieu's neglect of the substance of social networks is related to the criticisms that Bourdieu's framework often encounters, and that this neglect bears re-examination, since it is helpful to think of the ways in which differentiated social networks contribute to the development of habitus, help form fields, and so constitute the intersubjective social relations within which sociality, and practice more generally, occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Perceived Freedom and its Sociological Effects: An Inquiry into the Relationship Between Liberalism and Inequality.
- Author
-
Naito, Jun
- Subjects
INDIVIDUALISM ,DISTRIBUTIVE justice ,QUALITY of life ,LIBERTY ,LIBERALISM ,EQUALITY ,DEMOCRACY ,POVERTY & society ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Individual freedom has been regarded as one of the most important criteria for a desirable society and life. Recently, the theories of liberalism and distributive justice have received increasing attention as a theoretical basis for tackling problems pertaining to socioeconomic inequality and poverty. However, few quantitative analyses focus on the meaning of freedom in the context of socioeconomic inequality and political order in an existing liberal-democratic society. In this paper, I construct a self-rated measure of freedom—the overall perceived freedom scale—and examine (1) whether socioeconomic inequality is related to inequality of freedom, (2) whether freedom is related to subjective well-being, and (3) whether freedom affects people's political attitude toward inequalities. Analyses using data from a 2005 Japanese national survey ( N = 1320) reveal the following results: (1) people with higher personal income (not household income), higher education, and better health tend to perceive greater freedom, (2) people with higher perceived freedom are more likely to be satisfied with their life, and (3) individuals with higher perceived freedom are more likely to oppose the government's egalitarian policy, and their opposition is based on the liberal principle of freedom and self-responsibility. On the basis of these findings, the double-edged possibility of individual freedom and liberalism as an “enhancer” and “moderator” of socioeconomic inequalities and political conflicts is suggested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. INDIRECT MEASUREMENT OF REGIONAL CULTURE IN THE NETHERLANDS.
- Author
-
Brons, Lajos L.
- Subjects
CULTURE ,ECONOMIC geography ,URBAN policy ,URBAN planning ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
Culture is a key concept in contemporary cultural and economic geography, but geographical research on culture is thus far mainly limited to case studies. To supplement this qualitative approach with a quantitative analysis of cultural causes and effects of geographic phenomena a data set is needed that somehow measures culture. This paper presents an attempt at such a measurement at the spatial scale of Dutch municipalities. Culture as a ‘map for behaviour’ is measured here indirectly, by means of factor analysis. Five dimensions of Dutch regional culture were found in this way: (1) post-materialism; (2) Protestant conservatism; (3) classical individualism; (4) egalitarian anti-conservatism; and (5) dissatisfaction. Although the regional differences in these dimensions are to a considerable extent related to differences in urbanisation, income and education rather than to some historical cultural geography, the measurement is shown to be empirically relevant and can be used in further research on culture in geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. ‘Cultural fraud’: the role of culture in drug abuse.
- Author
-
Eckersley, Richard
- Subjects
CULTURE ,DRUGS ,HEALTH ,INDIVIDUALISM ,MATERIALISM ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
The research literature on the social determinants of health focuses on socio-economic inequalities and disadvantage. ‘Culture’ is usually seen as part of this picture of difference—associated with minority status, ethnicity or race; but we also need to address the role of dominant or mainstream cultures in health and well-being. Cultures provide the underlying assumptions of an entire way of life, allowing us to make sense of the world and our lives. This paper argues that aspects of modern western culture are a potent and under-estimated social factor behind drug use and abuse. It draws on a wide range of evidence from different disciplines to suggest that Western culture's emphasis on the material and the individual, in particular, amounts to ‘cultural fraud’: the promotion of images and ideals of life that do not meet human needs or reflect social realities. This failure is conducive to diminished well-being, including addiction to drug use or other behaviours. [Eckersley RM. ‘Cultural fraud’: the role of culture in drug abuse. Drug Alcohol Rev 2005;24:157 – 163] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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