Nghĩa của từ social control bằng Tiếng Việt

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Đặt câu có từ "social control"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "social control", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ social control, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ social control trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt

1. Social control was generally effective.

2. The revivals also provided for social control.

3. Why the Failure of Formal Social Control?

4. Law is also a method of social control.

5. Anasazi cannibalism: social control, ritual human sacrifice, and social pathology

6. In urban areas, therefore, the effectiveness of informal social control is reduced.

7. All political regimes attempt to manipulate information as a means of social control.

8. Once again shame and stigma are being touted as methods of social control.

9. The bureaucracy also offered a means of social control over potentially antagonistic classes.

10. Meanwhile I am drawn into the trees by something that transcends state or social control.

11. Our proposed explanation for Anasazi cannibalism combines…social control, ritual human sacrifice, and social pathology

12. Media power is the basis of information dissemination and a recessive power of social control.

13. The companies' main concerns, however, were with social control of their workforces outside the pits.

14. Some argued that a planned economy and tight social control were essential to the regime's survival.

15. Religious, educational and political institutions all play a part in the process of socialization and social control.

16. Social control of the rank and file, in its formal disciplinary guise, had a multitude of possibilities.

17. Respectability and social control Changes can be discerned in family patterns by the end of the century.

18. In addition, farmers can maintain a greater degree of social control over agricultural workers living in tied accommodation.

19. The social Constructionists, being interested in mechanisms of social control, naturally focus upon laws designed to control sexuality.

20. The main area of concern in such a sociology of the unconscious lies in the analysis of social control.

21. Bossism: 1 n domination of a political organization by a party boss Type of: domination social control by dominating

22. The left asserts that far from helping the poor it props up capitalism and embodies unacceptable forms of social control.

23. In so doing they legitimated and endorsed the statusquo, and fulfilled an ideological function of agent of disguised social control.

24. Individual nuclear family units not only provide the maximum number of outlets for commodity production, but also facilitate social control.

25. Medieval, feudal society was rigidly hierarchical, and control of bodies was a central part of social control of the population.

26. Asylums, for Foucault, were largely tools of social control, an argument that was effectively applied to mental illness more generally

27. Abolition is the only way to secure a future beyond anti-Black institutions of social control, violence, and premature death

28. The church for its part acted as an administrative agency of colonial expansion and a major institution of social control.

29. Pollution control work, then, is typical of the many areas of social control characterized by goals of regulation rather than repression.

30. Cannibalism as a tool of social control is exceptionally low-tech and can be effectively carried out by a small minority

31. Basques have a long-standing history of self-determination, which has resulted in resistance to external political, religious, and social control

32. Thus the mechanisms of social control discussed earlier in the chapter, are seen as essential to the maintenance of social order.

33. Bossism - domination of a political organization by a party boss domination - social control by dominating Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection

34. Examining the Antiascetic Hypothesis Through Social Control Theory: Delinquency, Religion, and Reciprocation Across the Early Life Course Crime and Delinquency January 22, 2018 Other authors

35. Findings regarding bidirectional and reciprocal effects between religion and delinquency encourage extending the Antiascetic hypothesis, as well as social control theory, to account for this possibility.

36. Imposed on and off since the turn of the century, Curfews tend to receive increased attention when there is a perceived need for more stringent efforts at social control.

37. Valens and the Monks: Cudgeling and Conscription as a Means of Social Control NOEL LENSKI ven before his death at the battle of Adrianople (9 August 378), Emperor Valens (r

38. The Negro Christianized can therefore be approached as a primary source historical document illustrating the nature of the master-slave relationship and of the methods used to induce social control

39. Ty Miller, Mike Vuolo Examining the Antiascetic Hypothesis Through Social Control Theory: Delinquency, Religion, and Reciprocation Across the Early Life Course, Crime & Delinquency 64, no.11 11 (Jan 2018): 1458–1488.

40. Ty Miller, Mike Vuolo Examining the Antiascetic Hypothesis Through Social Control Theory: Delinquency, Religion, and Reciprocation Across the Early Life Course, Crime & Delinquency 64, no.11 11 (Jan 2018): 1458–1488.

41. Covenants in the ancient world were solemn agreements by which societies attempted to regularize the behaviour of both individuals and social organizations, particularly in those contexts in which social control was either inadequate or nonexistent

42. Androcracy (s) , androcracies (pl) The political and social control and rule by males; masculine supremacy: Many countries in the world can be considered to be androcracies because the leaders are usually men and never women.

43. Within anthropology, the Acculturationist tradition focused on questions of cultural integration and documenting this process with attention to social pathologies and the changing locus of social control from traditional systems to modern systems of church and state.

44. ‘Coerciveness has long been used for social control in rituals such as union blackballing, college hazing, excommunication and corporal punishment.’ ‘Essentially, these are influence tools of differing Coerciveness.’ ‘As their problems have increased, so the police have moved higher up the scale of Coerciveness in their menu of

45. ‘Coerciveness has long been used for social control in rituals such as union blackballing, college hazing, excommunication and corporal punishment.’ ‘Essentially, these are influence tools of differing Coerciveness.’ ‘As their problems have increased, so the police have moved higher up the scale of Coerciveness in their menu of

46. appeasement: 1 n the act of appeasing (as by acceding to the demands of) Synonyms: calming Types: mollification , pacification the act of appeasing someone or causing someone to be more favorably inclined conciliation , placation , propitiation the act of placating and overcoming distrust and animosity Type of: social control control exerted

47. Appeasement: 1 n the act of appeasing (as by acceding to the demands of) Synonyms: calming Types: mollification , pacification the act of appeasing someone or causing someone to be more favorably inclined conciliation , placation , propitiation the act of placating and overcoming distrust and animosity Type of: social control control exerted

48. Anomie: 1 n lack of moral standards in a society Synonyms: Anomy Type of: immorality the quality of not being in accord with standards of right or good conduct n personal state of isolation and anxiety resulting from a lack of social control and regulation Synonyms: Anomy Type of: isolation a state of separation between persons or groups

49. In critiquing social-bond and social-control theories of delinquency, this paper notes that genuine choice or responsibility can occur for offenders only when they begin to understand how the mind functions to combine thought with consciousness to create dynamic personal realities that are only "Apparencies" and not "the truth." 31 references