Not exact matches
Their
research, which they will present at the 111th Annual Meeting of the American
Sociological Association (ASA),
suggests that divorce filings may be driven by a «domestic ritual» calendar governing family behavior.
Market / consumer /
sociological research that
suggests that higher - quality, better, more, etc. communication involving an understanding of global warming (including solutions) would not help, or would be bad somehow, strikes me as simply silly.
An earlier wave of
sociological research on the legal profession in the 1960s and 1970s, for example, pushed the legal profession courses of an earlier generation to include more sociology and history — as
suggested once again by the Carnegie Report.
Alongside this
research, there is intervention, epidemiological,
sociological and qualitative evidence all
suggesting that local environments are important in supporting the family capacity necessary to raise children in ways that promote good developmental outcomes.6, 7 The neighbourhoods or communities in which people live appears to impact health and well - being.8 While «neighbourhood» is often used in other studies, in the Australian context «neighbourhood» and «community» are often used interchangeably (these terms are further defined on page 9).7 The
research into neighbourhood effects on children was originally motivated by the observation that disadvantage seemed geographically concentrated and intergenerational.