Sentences with phrase «shape social relations»

Learning Matter considers how material conditions and technologies shape social relations.

Not exact matches

In the key Lavigne vs. OPSEU decision of 1991, Justice Gérard La Forest explained that the unionization model in Canada ensures that unions have «both the resources and the mandate necessary to enable them to play a role in shaping the political, economic and social context within which particular collective agreements and labour relations disputes will be negotiated and resolved.»
Globalization can thus be defined as worldwide social relations which link distant localities in such a way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring many miles away and vice versa.
It is with another woman in this world at this time that I am able to experience a radical mutuality between self and other, a mutuality that we have known since we were girl children, a mutuality that has shaped our consciousness of female - female relationships as the first and final place in which women can be most truly at home, in the most natural of social relations.
If, however, the neighbour's life is bound up with the community, then he can be served only in relation to the social structure which shapes his life.
Nussbaum, who has frequently visited India to research how gender relations shape social justice, is particularly concerned about the situation of women in contemporary India.
The social strand of ethics offers insight into the structural forms that govern life and shape social, political, and economic relations.
At the same time the themes that continue to shape her work — myth as a conduit to the subjective and social unconscious, the holistic yet destructive relations of humans with other species, the beauty yet fragility of the natural environment — make her work of vital relevance to the 21st century.
They have no stable material definition, but rather are shaped by evolving social, institutional and physical relations.
At the same time the themes that continue to shape her work — myth as a conduit to the subjective and social unconscious; the holistic yet destructive relations of humans with other species; the fragility of the natural environment; and the creativity of play — often represented by children — make her work of vital relevance to the 21st century.
By recording and documenting those on the edges, or outside of the mainstream, the images in Another Kind of Life bear witness to how social attitudes change across time and space, charting how visual representation has helped shape current discourse in relation to marginalised or alternative communities.
The exhibition continues Wallace's exploration of how power shapes our knowledge of the body and social relations.
Biographical legend, produced in the construction of an individual mythology, is a critique of biographism; it gives shape to the identity crises experienced by individuals in their various cultural and social relations of belonging.
My past work experience and educational success has shaped me into an employee with skills in Broadcast Journalism, Social Media, and Public Relations.
These perspectives argue that gender is not a trait of an individual, per se, but rather it is a social relation shaped by socialization processes and power inequalities (Ferree, 2010).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z