855 resultados para Social-historical psychology
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Cultural heritage sites all over the world are at risk due to aggressive urban expansion, development, wars and general obsolescence. Not all objects are recorded in detail although they may have social and historical significance. For example more emphasis is placed on the recording of castles and palaces than on crofters’ cottages or tenement blocks, although their history can be just as rich. This paper will investigate the historic fabric of Aberdeen through the use of digital scanning, supported by a range of media including old photographs and paintings. Dissemination of social heritage through visualisations will be explored and how this can aid the understanding of space within the city or specific area. Focus will be given to the major statues/monuments within the context of the city centre, exploring their importance in their environment. In addition studying why many have been re-located away from their original site, the reasons why, and how we have perhaps lost some of the social and historical importance of why that monument was first located there. It will be argued that Digital Media could be utilised for much more than re-creation and re-presentation of physical entities. Digital scanning, in association with visualisation tools, is used to capture the essence of both the cultural heritage and the society that created or used the sites in association with visualisation tools and in some way re-enacting the original importance placed upon the monument in its original location, through adoption of BIM Heritage.
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The thousands of books and articles on Charles de Gaulle's policy toward European integration, whether written by historians, social scientists, or commentators, universally accord primary explanatory importance to the General's distinctive geopolitical ideology. In explaining his motivations, only secondary significance, if any at all, is attached to commercial considerations. This paper seeks to reverse this historiographical consensus by examining the four major decisions toward European integration during de Gaulle's presidency: the decisions to remain in the Common Market in 1958, to propose the Foucher Plan in the early 1960s, to veto British accession to the EC, and to provoke the "empty chair" crisis in 1965-1966, resulting in the "Luxembourg Compromise." In each case, the overwhelming bulk of the primary evidence-speeches, memoirs, or government documents-suggests that de Gaulle's primary motivation was economic, not geopolitical or ideological. Like his predecessors and successors, de Gaulle sought to promote French industry and agriculture by establishing protected markets for their export products. This empirical finding has three broader implications: (1) For those interesred in the European Union, it suggests that regional integration has been driven primarily by economic, not geopolitical considerations--even in the "least likely" case. (2) For those interested in the role of ideas in foreign policy, it suggests that strong interest groups in a democracy limit the impact of a leader's geopolitical ideology--even where the executive has very broad institutional autonomy. De Gaulle was a democratic statesman first and an ideological visionary second. (3) For those who employ qualitative case-study methods, it suggests that even a broad, representative sample of secondary sources does not create a firm basis for causal inference. For political scientists, as for historians, there is in many cases no reliable alternative to primary-source research.
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The thousands of books and articles on Charles de Gaulle's policy toward European integration, whether written by historians, political scientists, or commentators, universally accord primary explanatory importance to the General's distinctive geopolitical ideology. In explaining his motivations, only secondary significance, if any at all, is attached to commercial considerations. This paper seeks to reverse this historiographical consensus by the four major decisions toward European integration taken under de Gaulle's Presidency: the decisions to remain in the Common Market in 1958, to propose the Fouchet Plan in the early 1960s, to veto British accession to the EC, and to provoke the "empty chair" crisis in 1965-1966, resulting in Luxembourg Compromise. In each case, the overwhelming bulk of the primary evidence speeches, memoirs, or government documents suggests that de Gaulle's primary motivation was economic, not geopolitical or ideological. Like his predecessors and successors, de Gaulle sought to promote French industry and agriculture by establishing protected markets for their export products. This empirical finding has three broader implications: (1) For those interested in the European Union, it suggests that regional integration has been driven primarily by economic, not geopolitical considerations even in the least likely case. (2) For those interested in the role of ideas in foreign policy, it suggests that strong interest groups in a democracy limit the impact of a leaders geopolitical ideology even where the executive has very broad institutional autonomy. De Gaulle was a democratic statesman first and an ideological visionary second. (3) For those who employ qualitative case-study methods, it suggests that even a broad, representative sample of secondary sources does not create a firm basis for causal inference. For political scientists, as for historians, there is in many cases no reliable alternative to primary source research.
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O presente trabalho teve por finalidade investigar a posição ocupada pela mulher dita de meia-idade nos meios de comunicação social. Para tanto, foram selecionadas cerca de quinze Revistas Femininas, editadas pela Bloch e Abril Cultural, tendo sido as fotos e ilustrações apresentadas em tais veículos de comunicação, submetidas ã Análise de Conteúdo, para a qual se contou com uma equipe formada por quatorze juízes, selecionados aleatoriamente. Os estímulos apresentados foram classificados em três categorias, quais sejam, "mulher jovem", "mulher de meia-idade" e "mulher idosa", e os resultados obtidos submetidos a uma análise lógica e estatística. Efetuou-se um estudo sobre a condição da mulher, segundo as dimensões biológica, social e psicológica, considerados aspectos relativos à mítica feminina, além de um-breve histórico sobre a situação da mulher no contexto social do País. Foram, também, observados dados referentes ã Psicologia do Consumidor. A partir dos resultados obtidos constatou-se que a incidência de estímulos classificados como sendo mulheres de meia-idade não foi significativa, alcançando, a figura da mulher jovem, a quase totalidade dos estímulos apresentados em todas as revistas examinadas, mantendo-se elevada mesmo naquelas dirigidas, segundo as Editoras, primordialmente, às mulheres de mais idade. Observou-se, também, uma tendência acentuada a se classificar na categoria "jovem" figuras femininas que se apresentassem como sexualmente atraentes, fisicamente belas e, ainda, a de artistas populares - esta, mesmo naqueles casos em que, reconhecidamente, se sabia possuidoras de idade superior aos 43 anos. Desse modo, concluiu-se que a figura feminina correspondente à mulher considerada de meia-idade, inexiste como forma de apelo social, o que contribuiu, sobremaneira, para tornar ainda mais conflitivo um período já crítico em si mesmo, como o é o climatério.
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"An Evergreen book."
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Selected references":p. 753-806.
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Bibliography: p. 363-366.
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Includes bibliography.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Issued under various titles.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliography: p. 503-517. "Bibliographical note" at end of each chapter except the last.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.