Results for 'social resistance'

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  1.  10
    Social Resistance and Spatial Knowledge: Protest Against Cruise Ships in Venice.Janine Schemmer - 2022 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 30 (3):377-406.
    Cruise ships are at the same time among the most popular and most controversial means of travel. Photos of oversized ships, passing through the historic center of Venice, have become iconic. This paper explores the background of the debate over cruise ships in Venice. Using research at the intersection of culture and technology, the history of technology, urban anthropology, and social movement theory, it sheds light on how the spatialization of the cruise industry through infrastructures affects Venice and the (...)
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  2.  13
    Performance as Social Resistance: Pussy Riot as a Feminist Avant-garde.Ilaria Riccioni & Jeffrey A. Halley - 2021 - Theory, Culture and Society 38 (7-8):211-231.
    This article describes the short but remarkable sociopolitical life of the Russian rock group Pussy Riot. The group became famous in 2012 not only for the political content of its performances but for its transgressive performativity: its violation of established public settings and its creation of disturbing anti-authoritarianism images of today’s official Russia. The analysis aims to establish Pussy Riot as part of an avant-garde movement and as a radicalization of the very idea of the avant-garde against the familiarity of (...)
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  3.  18
    Geopolitics and Social Resistance: Flows of Latin America’s Natural Resources.Victoria Machado - 2018 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 31 (1):129-135.
    This review essay looks at Christopher Boyer’s Political landscapes: forests, conservation and community in Mexico,, Thomas Miller Klubock’s La Frontera: forests and ecological conflict in Chile’s Frontier Territory, Pablo Lapegna’s Soybeans and power: genetically modified crops, environmental politics and social movements in Argentina and Elspeth Probyn’s Eating the ocean as each provide a holistic study of how political ecology and marginalized peoples engage the issue of natural resources in Latin America. Through they deal with different regions and a wide (...)
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  4.  14
    Hilde Lindemann’s Counterstories: A Framework for Understanding the #MeToo Social Resistance Movement on Twitter.Henk Jasper van Gils-Schmidt - 2021 - Phenomenology and Mind 20:88-99.
    This paper proposes a framework for understanding and analysing online social resistance movements based on Hilde Lindemann’s concept of counterstories (Damaged Identities, Narrative Repair, 2003). This framework is based on the premise that we shape our identities in shared social spaces, and that such shared spaces are structured according to so-called ‘master narratives’. Master narratives define the ‘realm of possible identities’ that we can assume, and form the basis for either recognizing or denying recognition to various (...) groups in specific roles that they might occupy. Social oppression occurs when master narratives preclude or forbid a certain form of self-expression, or alternatively force members of a specific social group into a determinate societal role (say, women who receive recognition only in the roles of mother or housewife). Counterstories serve as a corrective to these aspects of oppression by challenging the oppressive facets of master narratives. Based on this framework, I propose an interpretation of the #MeToo movement as a counterstory that aims to change the oppressive aspects of the patriarchal master narrative that (partially) structures many shared social spaces in the modern Western world. I end this paper by applying the framework to consider potential obstacles #MeToo may encounter as a distinctively online movement. (shrink)
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  5.  37
    From Resistance to Opportunity-Seeking: Strategic Responses to Institutional Pressures for Corporate Social Responsibility in the Nordic Fashion Industry.Esben Rahbek Gjerdrum Pedersen & Wencke Gwozdz - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 119 (2):245-264.
    Using survey responses from 400 fashion companies in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland, we examine the diversity of strategic responses to institutional pressures for corporate social responsibility within the Nordic fashion industry. We also develop and test a new model of strategic responses to institutional pressures that encompasses both resistance and opportunity-seeking behaviour. Our results suggest that it is inconsistent pressures within, rather than between, stakeholder groups that shape strategic responses to CSR pressures and that increasing pressures (...)
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  6. Resisting Reality: Social Construction and Social Critique.Sally Haslanger - 2012 - New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    In this collection of previously published essays, Sally Haslanger draws on insights from feminist and critical race theory and on the resources of contemporary analytic philosophy to develop the idea that gender and race are positions ...
  7.  50
    Kuhn's alternative path: Science and the social resistance to criticism.Stephanie Solomon - 2010 - Perspectives on Science 18 (3):352-368.
    Popper: I do admit that at any moment we are prisoners caught in the framework of our theories; our expectations; our past experiences; our language. But we are prisoners in a Pickwickian sense: if we try, we can break out of our framework at any time. Admittedly, we shall find ourselves again in a framework, but it will be a better and roomier one; and we can at any moment break out of it again.Kuhn: If that possibility were routinely available, (...)
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  8. Resisting Social Categories.Sara Bernstein - 2024 - Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility 8:81-102.
    The social categories to which we belong—Latino, disabled, American, woman— causally influence our lives in deep and unavoidable ways. One might be pulled over by police because one is Latino, or one might receive a COVID vaccine sooner because one is American. Membership in these social categories most often falls outside of our control. This paper argues that membership in social categories constitutes a restriction on human agency, creating a situation of non-ideal agency for many human individuals. (...)
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  9.  17
    Researching Resistance and Social Change: A Critical Approach to Theory and Practice.Mikael Baaz, Mona Lilja & Stellan Vinthagen - 2017 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International. Edited by Mona Lilia & Stellan Vinthagen.
    Provides a robust theoretical and methodological framework for researching of resistance and social change.
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  10.  99
    The Epistemology of Resistance: Gender and Racial Oppression, Epistemic Injustice, and the Social Imagination.José Medina - 2012 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    This book explores the epistemic side of racial and sexual oppression. It elucidates how social insensitivities and imposed silences prevent members of different groups from listening to each other.
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  11. Spatial stress and resistance: social meanings of spatialization.Rob Shields - 1997 - In Georges Benko & Ulf Strohmayer (eds.), Space and social theory: interpreting modernity and postmodernity. Malden, MA: Blackwell. pp. 33--186.
  12.  55
    Resisting the seduction of the global education measurement industry: notes on the social psychology of PISA.Gert Biesta - 2015 - Ethics and Education 10 (3):348-360.
    The question I raise in this paper is why measurement systems such as PISA have gained so much power in contemporary education policy and practice. I explore this question from the bottom up by asking what might contribute to the ways in which people invest in systems such as PISA, that is, what are the beliefs, assumptions and desires that lead people to actively lending support to the global education measurement industry or fall for its seduction. I discuss three aspects (...)
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  13.  9
    Why Social Enterprises Resist or Collectively Improve Impact Assessment: The Role of Prior Organizational Experience and “Impact Lock-In”.Jarrod Ormiston - 2023 - Business and Society 62 (5):989-1030.
    This article examines how organizational experience influences social enterprise responses to impact assessment practices. Limited attention has been paid to why organizations resist or challenge impact assessment practices or how prior experience with impact assessment may shape organizational responses. The study draws on interviews with practitioners involved in social enterprise–impact investor dyads in Australia and the United Kingdom. The findings reveal that social enterprises enact either combative or collaborative responses in their relationships with impact investors based on (...)
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  14. Resisting Sparrow's Sexy Reductio : Selection Principles and the Social Good.Simon Rippon, Pablo Stafforini, Katrien Devolder, Russell Powell & Thomas Douglas - 2010 - American Journal of Bioethics 10 (7):16-18.
    Principles of procreative beneficence (PPBs) hold that parents have good reasons to select the child with the best life prospects. Sparrow (2010) claims that PPBs imply that we should select only female children, unlesswe attach normative significance to “normal” human capacities. We argue that this claim fails on both empirical and logical grounds. Empirically, Sparrow’s argument for greater female wellbeing rests on a selective reading of the evidence and the incorrect assumption that an advantage for females would persist even when (...)
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  15.  30
    Social scientists under threat: Resistance and self-censorship in Turkish academia.Vezir Aktas, Marco Nilsson & Klas Borell - 2019 - British Journal of Educational Studies 67 (2):169-186.
  16.  26
    The Resistance that Modernity Constantly Provokes: Europe, America and Social Theory.Peter Wagner - 1999 - Thesis Eleven 58 (1):35-58.
    During the past two centuries, and in particular during the inter-war period, American ways of living and of thinking have become one principal object of European reflections on modernity. This essay explores some of the ways in which the rejection or affirmation of modernity in Europe has been channelled through observations on America. It is argued that the variety of European ways of looking at America also demonstrates the range of forms available to social theory for thinking the (...) world under conditions of modernity and that this European debate provided some seeds for the current discussion about `multiple modernities'. (shrink)
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  17.  16
    Tomboy resistance and conformity: Agency in social psychological gender theory.C. Lynn Carr - 1998 - Gender and Society 12 (5):528-553.
    Using life history narratives, the present study investigates processes of agency and consciousness among 14 women who identified themselves as tomboys. Most informants shared two “moments” of consciousness—a rejection of femininity and a choice of masculinity. Participants also revealed two forms of agency—active gender resistance and conformity. Implications for building agentic understandings of gender identity are discussed. While agency appears to be an important factor in gender identification, it tends to be overlooked by individuals themselves, perhaps through a process (...)
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  18.  7
    Social Implications of Weight Bias Internalisation: Parents’ Ultimate Responsibility as Consent, Social Division and Resistance.Sharon Noonan-Gunning - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Responsibility is a moral quality of caring that is central to child health policies. In contemporary UK these policies are based on behavioural psychology and underpinned by individualism, an ideology central to neoliberal governance. Amid the complexities of “obesity” and inequalities, there is a multi-layered stigmatisation of parents as moral associates. Few studies consider the lived realities of food policy processes from the standpoint of class. This critical qualitative research draws on theorists who explain processes of power and class: Foucault, (...)
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  19.  20
    Resisting the drive to theorise : a phenomenological perspective on social science research.Emma Williams - 2018 - Magis, Revista Internacional de Investigación En Educación 11 (22):43-56.
    This article explores predominant uses of theory in social science research in relation to the approach of phenomenological philosophy. While phenomenology is sometimes interpreted as one theoretical or methodological paradigm amongst others in the field of qualitative research, this article explores key thinkers within the philosophical tradition of phenomenology to argue that this tradition can raise challenges for predominant conceptions of research and theorizing in the social sciences and certain philosophical idea(l)s that can be connected to them. The (...)
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  20.  25
    Resisting neoliberal capitalism in Chile: The possibility of social critique.Hector Rios-Jara - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (S3):106-109.
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  21. Resisting Reality: Social Construction and Social Critique.Michael Root - 2013 - Analysis 73 (3):563-568.
  22.  81
    The social implications of neurobiological explanations of resistible compulsions.Adrian Carter & Wayne Hall - 2007 - American Journal of Bioethics 7 (1):15 – 17.
    The authors comments on several articles on addiction. Research suggests that addicted individuals have substantial impairments in cognitive control of behavior. The authors maintain that a proper study of addiction must include a neurobiological model of addiction to draw the attention of bioethicists and addiction neurobiologists. They also state that more addiction neuroscientists like S. E. Hyman are needed as they understand the limits of their research. Accession Number: 24077921; Authors: Carter, Adrian 1; Email Address: [email protected] Hall, Wayne 1; Affiliations: (...)
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  23.  14
    Understanding Resistance to Content Literacy by Pre-Service Social Studies Teachers.Aimee Alexander-Shea - 2015 - Journal of Social Studies Research 39 (3):125-133.
    Over the past decade, heightened attention has been placed on integrating literacy strategies into the social studies. The content literacy movement, as it has become known, began with the passing of No Child Left Behind and has continued with the newly implemented Common Core State Standards. In light of this movement, many states required the pre-service social studies teachers to take courses to teach them how to integrate content literacy into their field in spite of the fact that (...)
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  24.  14
    Movimientos sociales rurales en tiempos neoliberales: antagonismos y subjetividades políticas en resistencias / Rural social movements in neoliberal times: antagonisms and political subjectivities in resistance.Oscar Soto - 2020 - Resistances. Journal of the Philosophy of History 1 (2):122-133.
    Este artículo realiza un análisis sobre la experiencia política del Movimiento Nacional Campesino Indígena- Somos Tierra, con la intención de caracterizar las modalidades de resistencias surgidas en los espacios rurales latinoamericanos, particularmente en Argentina. Se parte del supuesto de que en la praxis de los movimientos sociales/populares, en particular los movimientos campesinos-indígenas, se estructuran y re-configuran subjetividades políticas en procesos de resistencia, cuyas tramas de acción conforman otra episteme y una nueva cultura política que se evidencia entre otras cosas en (...)
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  25.  3
    Moral resistance and spiritual authority: our Jewish obligation to social justice.Seth M. Limmer & Jonah Dov Pesner (eds.) - 2019 - New York: Central Conference of American Rabbis.
    The essays in this collection explore the spiritual underpinnings of our Jewish commitment to justice, using Jewish text and tradition, as well as contemporary sources and models. Among the topics covered are women's health, LGBTQ rights, healthcare, racial justice, speaking truth to power, and community organizing.
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  26.  68
    Counter-narratives as resistance: Creating critical social studies spaces with communities.Tommy Ender - 2019 - Journal of Social Studies Research 43 (2):133-143.
    Social studies’ explanations of race can marginalize educators of color, due to a lack of focus in the curriculum or conversations in the classroom. This article addresses the problem through composite counter-narratives, created from collaborations between the author and current social studies teachers of color. Two teachers, Charlie Smith and Rosita Hernandez, describe their experiences learning and teaching social studies through the lens of community. Current research positions counter-narratives as a pedagogical tool for pre-service teachers resisting majoritarian (...)
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  27.  41
    Algorithmic Censorship by Social Platforms: Power and Resistance.Jennifer Cobbe - 2020 - Philosophy and Technology 34 (4):739-766.
    Effective content moderation by social platforms is both important and difficult; numerous issues arise from the volume of information, the culturally sensitive and contextual nature of that information, and the nuances of human communication. Attempting to scale moderation, social platforms are increasingly adopting automated approaches to suppressing communications that they deem undesirable. However, this brings its own concerns. This paper examines the structural effects of algorithmic censorship by social platforms to assist in developing a fuller understanding of (...)
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  28. Rastafari as resistance and the ambiguities of essentialism in the new social movements.Anna Marie Smith - 1994 - In Ernesto Laclau (ed.), The making of political identities. New York: Verso.
  29.  15
    Resisting the Post-Truth Era: Maintaining a Commitment to Science and Social Justice in Bioethics.Johanna Olson-Kennedy, Diane Ehrensaft, Alice Virani & Beth A. Clark - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (7):W1-W3.
    Volume 19, Issue 7, July 2019, Page W1-W3.
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  30.  14
    Language, Social Reality, and Resistance in the Age of Kierkegaard’s Review of Two Ages.Robert L. Perkins - 1999 - Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 1999 (1):164-181.
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  31.  9
    Resistance, Forgiveness, Social Justice.Michael A. Peters - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (1):1-3.
  32.  25
    Successful resistance or resisting success? Surviving the silent social order of the theory classroom.Fiona Nicoll & Melissa Gregg - 2008 - Social Epistemology 22 (2):203 – 217.
    Fiona Nicoll and Melissa Gregg met on the job at a new university having both moved from Sydney to Brisbane to take up their appointments. Here they share reflections on teaching a cultural theory course that they inherited from a prominent Australian Professor of Cultural Studies, offering the perspectives of two consecutive generations of cultural studies theorists now teaching in the field since the early 1990s. This situation gives rise to new interpretations regarding the value and uses of theory in (...)
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  33.  17
    Placental Social Ethics: Designing for Epistemologies of Resistance.Celia T. Bardwell-Jones - 2022 - The Pluralist 17 (1):77-83.
    i thank dr. vink for her impressive analysis of design and introducing me to another method in thinking about institutional organization. I also am deeply grateful for Dr. Vink’s engagement with my work on “Placental Ethics: Addressing Colonial Legacies and Imagining Culturally Safe Responses to Health Care in Hawaiʻi” and responding to the call to re-envision alternative design models in guiding institutional operations that seek community engagement. Responding to this paper helped me to think further about the work I began (...)
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  34.  19
    Faith, Resistance, and the Future: Daniel Berrigan's challenge to Catholic social thought.James L. Marsh & Anna J. Brown - 2012 - Fordham University Press.
  35.  30
    Bolstering Managers’ Resistance to Temptation via the Firm’s Commitment to Corporate Social Responsibility.Cathy A. Beaudoin, Anna M. Cianci, Sean T. Hannah & George T. Tsakumis - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 157 (2):303-318.
    Behavioral ethics research has focused predominantly on how the attributes of individuals influence their ethicality. Relatively neglected has been how macro-level factors such as the behavior of firms influence members’ ethicality. Researchers have noted specifically that we know little about how a firm’s CSR influences members’ behaviors. We seek to better merge these literatures and gain a deeper understanding of the role macro-level influences have on manager’s ethicality. Based on agency theory and social identity theory, we hypothesize that a (...)
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  36.  16
    Neoliberal Techniques of Social Suffering: Political Resistance and Critical Theory from Latin America and Spain.Laura Quintana & Nuria Sánchez Madrid (eds.) - 2023 - Lexington Books.
    Neoliberal Techniques of Social Suffering: Political Resistance and Critical Theory from Latin America and Spain is the result of the critical and political commitment of various Latin American and Spanish philosophers who share a critical approach to the global “stealth revolution” in recent decades, where neoliberalism has forced the well-being and reproduction of life to adapt to a system devastating for both humans and non-humans. The authors voice the shared concern of contemporary Spanish and Latin American societies to (...)
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  37. Rezension von Sally Haslanger, Resisting Reality: Social Construction and Social Critique. [REVIEW]Kristina Lepold - 2013 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Literatur 1:26-34.
  38.  52
    Critique and resistance: Ethical, social‐theoretical, political? On Fabian Freyenhagen's Adorno's Practical Philosophy.Robin Celikates - 2017 - European Journal of Philosophy 25 (3):846-853.
    Fabian Freyenhagen's impressive reconstruction of Adorno's ‘practical philosophy’ provides a convincing defence of the possibility of making normative claims about the social world we live in without justifying these claims in terms of the right, the good, or human nature. More specifically, and more controversially, Freyenhagen argues that the normative resources Adorno's critique relies on are provided by a negative Aristotelianism. In this paper, I argue that this approach underestimates the extent to which Adorno follows the model of immanent (...)
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  39.  18
    Utilizing a social ethic toward the environment in assessing genetically engineered insect-resistance in trees.R. R. James - 1997 - Agriculture and Human Values 14 (3):237-249.
    Social policies are used to regulate how members of a society interact and share resources. If we expand our sense of community to include the ecosystem of which we are a part, we begin to develop an ethical obligation to this broader community. This ethic recognizes that the environment has intrinsic value, and each of us, as members of society, are ethically bound to preserve its sustainability. In assessing the environmental risks of new agricultural methods and technologies, society should (...)
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  40.  49
    Fronterizas in Resistance: Feminist Demands within Social Movements Organizations.Ana Laura Ramírez Vázquez & Luis Rubén Díaz Cepeda - 2018 - Essays in Philosophy 19 (1):93-117.
    Latin America is one of the most unequal continents in the world. This inequality translates into marked limitations in the possibilities of having a decent life for a high percentage of the population. Within the groups that are affected, women are undoubtedly even more so, because, in addition to shared economic and social inequalities with other vulnerable groups, they face discrimination based on gender. In Latin America, political protest has been undertaken by women who wish to denounce and abate (...)
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  41.  51
    International Law, Social Change and Resistance: A Conversation Between Professor Anna Grear (Cardiff) and Professorial Fellow Dianne Otto.Dianne Otto & Anna Grear - 2018 - Feminist Legal Studies 26 (3):351-363.
    This conversation between two scholars of international law focuses on the contemporary realities of feminist analysis of international law and on current and future spaces of resistance. It notes that feminism has moved from the margin towards the centre, but that this has also come at a cost. As the language of women’s rights and gender equality has travelled into the international policy worlds of crisis management and peace and security, feminist scholars need to become more careful in their (...)
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  42.  17
    Civility, Nonviolent Resistance, and the New Struggle for Social Justice.Amin Asfari (ed.) - 2019 - Boston: Brill | Rodopi.
    In _Civility, Nonviolent Resistance, and the New Struggle for Social Justice_, contributors expose the roots of injustice and violence, and propose civil, nonviolent ways of challenging them.
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  43.  7
    Portraits of Resistance: Exploring Intra-personal, Social, and Institutional Resistances through the Use of Arts-Based Research among Racialized Parents of Autistic Children and Youth.Fiona J. Moola, Nivatha Moothathamby, Stephanie Posa & Methuna Naganathan - 2024 - Studies in Social Justice 18 (1):103-124.
    The lives of children who live at the intersectional nexus between childhood autism and race may be considered as “shadow stories” that have remained silenced in autism literature. We explored the experiences of racialized parents who provide care to autistic children. We drew on a theoretical framework known as DisCrit and decolonizing arts-based methodologies. Racialized parents of autistic children demonstrated resistance along various themes, including fighting the system, protecting my child, and creating cultural communities. We join black girlhood studies, (...)
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  44.  17
    Growth and Resistance: How Deweyan Pragmatism Reconstructs Social Justice Education.Peter J. Nelsen - 2016 - Educational Theory 66 (1-2):231-244.
    While Democracy and Education is often cited within the scholarship on and teaching of social justice education, it and Dewey's work generally remain underutilized. Peter Nelsen argues in this essay that Deweyan pragmatism offers rich resources for social justice education by exploring how Dewey's three-part conception of growth has both analytical and normative force. Nelsen makes this case by examining student resistance to engagement with social justice issues, and concludes from this analysis that resistance is (...)
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  45.  25
    Resisting Reality: Social Construction and Social Critique. [REVIEW]Federica Gregoratto - 2015 - Journal of Social Ontology 1 (1):171–173.
  46.  4
    Beyond Paradigm: Resisting the Assimilation of Phronetic Social Science.Sanford F. Schram - 2004 - Politics and Society 32 (3):417-433.
    David Laitin uses Bent Flyvbjerg’s Making Social Science Matter as a surrogate manifesto on behalf of the Perestroika movement’s campaign for methodological pluralism in political science. After an overview of Perestroika, I note my own vision for the movement, outline the most significant features of Flyvbjerg’s call for a revived social science, and provide a critique of Laitin’s attempt to assimilate Flyvbjerg’s analysis to his own vision for an improved political science. I conclude with a word about the (...)
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  47.  8
    Critical theory and contemporary social movements: Conceptualizing resistance in the neoliberal age.Charles Masquelier - 2013 - European Journal of Social Theory 16 (4):395-412.
    The advent of an unregulated and financial form of capitalism, combined with a sharp rise in income inequalities and economic insecurity since the 1970s, appears to pose, at first glance, a significant challenge for the relevance of the works of first-generation critical theorists, which are often confined to an historically specific ‘artistic’ critique of the bureaucratic stage of capitalist development. Through an analysis of the various concerns and demands expressed by members of the alter-globalization and Occupy movements, the article nevertheless (...)
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  48. Theory and resistance in education: towards a pedagogy for the opposition.Henry A. Giroux - 2001 - Westport, Conn.: Bergin & Garvey.
    Giroux argues that challenge gives new meaning to the importance of resistance, the relevance of pedagogy, and the significance of political agency.
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  49.  34
    Tocqueville's resistance to the social.Cheryl B. Welch - 2004 - History of European Ideas 30 (1):83-107.
    This essay examines Tocqueville's conception of the “social” against the background of debates over the relationship between the social and the political in France from the Revolution to mid-century. It focuses on three groups: those associated with the social philosophy of industrialisme, those concerned with the evils of pauperism from the standpoint of Catholic social reform, and those allied with the new Doctrinaire view of society and politics. It argues that Tocqueville consistently resisted the primacy of (...)
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  50.  11
    Hobbesian resistance and the law of nature.Samuel Mansell - 2024 - Intellectual History Review 34 (2):317-341.
    Hobbes’s account of the individual’s right to resist sovereign authority is nuanced. His allowance for cases in which a sovereign’s command falls outside the terms of the social contract, despite recent reappraisals, cannot rescue him from the accusation that his system is contradictory. It has been suggested that some Hobbesian rights can be transferred whilst others are quarantined, or that it is the institution of law, rather than the particular commands of the sovereign, which Hobbes ultimately upholds. By reconsidering (...)
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