|
Socyberty > Authors > India
|
 |
India |
|
|
 | | Political Party | | by India, Nov 16, 2008 | | Etymologically the word "party" has been derived from the word "part". It refers to a situation in which there exists either a controversy or competition between two or more groups of people within a particular society or political order. | | Comments(1) Liked It: 4 |
|
 | | Life Cycle of Social Movement | | by India, Nov 1, 2008 | | No two movements are exactly alike; yet different movements have much in common. Most completed movements pass through much the same set of four stages - of unrest, excitement, formalization, and institutionalization, first suggested by W.E. Gettys, who applied them to his study of the Methodist movement in England. A few accomplish their purpose without needing to enter the later stages. Other life cycles suggested by Zald and Ash and by Blumer are quite similar, differing only in details. | | Comments(1) Liked It: 6 |
|
 | | Secularism | | by India, Oct 21, 2008 | | In modern industrial societies, the hold of religious belief over different aspects of life has declined, although interest in religion as a phenomenon persists. Religion sheds much of its collective and communal overtones and becomes largely a personal concern. Where experience and empirical knowledge fail, religion offers answers. In societies imbued with scientific ethos, the range of these explanations is narrowed, and they are less implicitly believed. In fact, until science can provide all answers, religion will continue to illuminate some of the imponderables of the universe. | | Comments(1) Liked It: 6 |
|
 | | Migration in India | | by India, Sep 27, 2008 | | Employment appears to the one of the main reasons for migration of the people. Economic constraint at the native place of the migrants motivates or couples the people to leave their original place in search of livelihood or economic betterment at different destinations in urban zones. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 13 |
|
 | | Phenomenology and Sociology | | by India, Aug 5, 2008 | | Phenomenological perspective in sociology offers a radical alternative to positivist methodology. From a phenomenological perspective there is a fundamental difference between the subject matter of the natural and social sciences. | | Comments(0) Liked It: 23 |
|
|