Developments in American Sociological Theory, 1915-1950 Jack HardingThis book presents a comprehensive, extended, and systematic analysis of social theory as it developed between the two World Wars, a period during which major transformation occurred. Centering on the continuities, on the one hand, and discontinuities on the other, in substantive theory, it deals with the major ideas of Cooley, Ellwood, Park, Thomas, Ogburn, Bernard, Chapin, Mead, Faris, Hankins, MacIver, Reuter, Lundberg, H. P. Becker, Parsons,
As his reputation burgeoned with the publications of The Crossing and Cities of the Plain
This chapter first describes the challenges of diverse climates
Sterling-Folker argues that widespread explanatory reliance on what constitutes functionally efficient choices in global interdependence is deductively illogical and empirically unsound
Debunking the legends that have sprung up around this unusual case of modern mummification
while enhancing environmental services
and economic organization with new possibilities as well as new hazards
Where there are invenzioni rather than ricardi
This chapter reviews the use of amino acids in dairy nutrition
Selection of techniques to measure aggregate stability need to consider the type of disruptive forces and breakdown processes to which field aggregates are subjected
foremost among American intellectuals and a vanguard figure in the "theory movement" of the past three decades
En respuesta a un creciente interés en el campo de la zooarqueología
and the Eastern thinkers as textual examples