As discussed earlier, until now the increase in protectionism in the 1920’s has been explained with the adverse effects of World War I. Clearly, the concurrent timing of World War I is the main concern with our analysis: as the pandemic started when the war ended, we have to account for...
Social StudiesWarWorld HistoryReports results of a survey of professional literature, curriculum guides, textbook advertisements, and newspaper articles from World War II era in order to assess response of social studies educators to crisis of World War II and effect of the war on the social ...
This book focuses on the psychosocial effects of conflicts. It provides an analysis of the social and psychological effects of conflicts on the lives of women. Displacement, separation from family, detention, rape and other forms of sexual violence, grief, loss or disappearance of relatives, fear...
to have one’s feelings and experiences confirmed by others as being legitimate and valid. As such, intersubjective recognition does appear to form a distinct part of the overdetermined complex of meanings and effects associated with self-injury and may be an...
In contrast, the overall revealed distress of children and adolescents did not increase during those crises. The nature of young people’s concerns, however, changed more strongly than for adults after the COVID-19 outbreak. Consistent with the effects of social distancing, call topics of young ...
poverty, their inclusion in a definition of poverty would tend to obscure the relation between them and the inability to provide for one’s basic needs. Whatever definition one uses, authorities and laypersons alike commonly assume that the effects of poverty are harmful to both individuals and ...
Effects of social pressure were compared between the pre- and post-World War \{II\} generations in Japan. The dependent variable was the number of children in the regression equation. A dummy variable for the first child, which was set to 1 when the first child was a boy, and a dummy...
India: Social effects Karl Marx’s social theory of class Karl Marx For Marx, what distinguishes one type of society from another is its mode ofproduction(i.e., the nature of itstechnologyanddivision of labour), and each mode of production engenders a distinctive class system in which one ...
Predisposition to antisocial behaviours — including social detachment and violence — is also modulated by early life adversity; however, the effects of early life stress depend on the timing of exposure and genetic factors. Research in animals and humans has revealed some of the structural, ...
b Difference in absolute longevity and c relative longevity (residuals of longevity, which was adjusted for body mass) across the three social organization states (solitary: n = 491, pair-living: n = 65, group-living: n = 368). We accounted for the effects of phylogenetic ...