Sentences with phrase «social contexts for»

Through various forms of technology — video projections, virtual reality, digital installations, and film — used within the exhibition galleries, DS+R has created atmospheric scenes that convey imagined functional and social contexts for Chareau's work.»
Diversifying the palette of interest in student voice, Cook - Sather also explores interconnections with postmodern feminists and social critics, as well as recent developments in the medical and legal realms that offer social contexts for engaging participants in institutional transformation.
Her Ph.D. was not in science, but she ensures that her scientist partner sees political and social contexts for the science.
The Christian reformist rejects patriarchy; but she asserts that while the social context for Christianity is indeed patriarchal, its fundamental meaning is not to be identified with its patriarchal context.
By what moral standards do we establish a social context for the family?
Rather, it is a model, which does not derive from images and reality.107 As part of language, metaphor is not only used in a textual context, but also in an oral context, providing a social context for both.
Destroying our social context for the sake of greater income does not enhance our personal well being.
Without arguing for the literal revival of that earlier conception, I hope to show that only a new imaginative, religious, moral, and social context for science and technology will make it possible to weather the storms that seem to be closing in on us in the late 20th century.
As part of the project, DoSER is producing a series of booklets that explore the social context for science engagement and provide an overview of best science communication practices, including for engagement with religious publics, drawing on established guidelines and the latest peer - reviewed research.
degree that would give him a good view of the social context for renewable energies.
• D: Describe - Asking the caregiver, and the patient if possible, to describe the «who, what, when and where» of situations where problem behaviors occur and the physical and social context for them.
One possibility is that the social context for learning at a choice school is much more supportive, and therefore students persist even if their academic record is lagging.
He led a discussion about the reform priorities and policies at the state level and the political and social context for the reforms.

Not exact matches

As horrific as the tolls from Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy — or those from the tsunamis in Japan (2011) and the Indian Ocean (2004)-- were, Galea reveals how the social context in each affected region transformed the population's health, in ways good and bad, for years afterward.
As previously mentioned, reaching out to reporters on social media allows for transparency and context.
For that context to be considered «social,» however, no one involved can earn anything; they can only play the game.
The general concept is that playing for money can be legal if it is in a purely social context.
To add context to your promotions and to reach a new, engaged audience, consider partnering with relevant influencers on social media for giveaways or special offers.
Thanks to the popularity of social commerce, more social media brands are considering the model and tinkering with their own advertising strategies; expect to see a more fluid online experience for online shoppers in the near future, which may decrease the need for your own stand - alone website in an SEO context.
Is the drive for passive income in an age of stagnation placing the global economy in permanent peril and creating a context for social strife?
In addition to putting a human face to the brand, the video content can be repurposed and reshared by marketing in social channels, and be used to provide more context for buyer personas.
The major challenge for the federal government in the budget expected this month is to maintain its commitment to progressive social and economic policies in the context of a major shift to the political right in the United States.
This role and framework is important also for another crucial reason: if buyer personas are developed and created through the prisms of marketing and sales research orientation, they will tend to be self - referential views of target buyers (an inside - out view) as opposed to a means for discovering not so obvious and hidden meanings that make up social and cultural contexts.
The AIDS pandemic in Africa may be a generic social issue for a U.S. retailer like Home Depot, a value chain impact for a pharmaceutical company like GlaxoSmithKline, and a competitive context issue for a mining company like Anglo American that depends on local labor in Africa for its operations.
Carbon emissions may be a generic social issue for a financial services firm like Bank of America, a negative value chain impact for a transportation - based company like UPS, or both a value chain impact and a competitive context issue for a car manufacturer like Toyota.
Without context in strategy planning for the new social buyer persona, we are left with a factual approach to identifying target social buyers.
In the world of marketing and sales, we are seeing the need for contextual understanding due to a very relevant fact: the context we understood for many years about buyer behavior has drastically changed due to social technologies.
Targeted benefit enhancements for Social Security recipients who need them most certainly should be considered in the context of a reform plan, and indeed they have been included in a number of bipartisan plans put forward in recent years.
In the present social and cultural context, where there is a widespread tendency to relativize truth, practising charity in truth helps people to understand that adhering to the values of Christianity is not merely useful but essential for building a good society and for true integral human development.
There it wasn't so much about deconstructing theological concepts for reconstructing a theoretical utopia, but in working side - by - side as partners in social transformation enterprises that fit the context of the communities the Spirit planted us in.
Education for this kind of pastoral leadership — as our Protestant forebears in the early decades of this century understood so well — must connect individual faith and social context.
I mean studying Scripture alongside our social context, so that Scripture is the blueprint for our civic engagement.
The poet invites us to watch creation as it is assaulted by God; the social context of Jeremiah provides ample motivation for the debilitating rage of Yahweh.
This will happen, for example, when the social and cultural context of its practices changes and seems novel and puzzling.
A «natural grouping» is a small social unit made up of people whose fives are in some measure interlaced and who provide for each other a stable context in which the orderly transmission of values can take place from parents to children.
Sometimes social media allows us to «connect» with people for the sake of connecting rather than for the sake of living — gratifying an urge inside of us momentarily, while preventing us from experiencing true intimacy in its most fulfilling context: real life.
In other contexts, such as that of social action, we may want liberals to be more assertive about convictions that divide them from others; to be willing, for example, to call a social policy unchristian that they think is unchristian.
Moreover, objectivity does not rule thought; human imagination, valuation and social location govern how we identify and classify things — and thus, how we construct contexts for comparison.
But these explanations focus on psychological factors rather than providing insight into the institutional contexts in which ideas are actually produced, paid for, brought into contact with an interested audience, enacted in collective rituals, used to mobilize resources against competing ideologies, and embedded in social arrangements.
To understand how ideas change, we need to consider not only subjective needs and values but also the relations between actors who articulate ideas and actors who provide an audience for these ideas, the institutional contexts in which these dynamics take place, and the larger social resources that institutions have at their disposal.
By setting his, discussion in the context of a dialectic (externalization, objectification, internalization), he has in effect stressed the importance of social interaction for the production and maintenance of religion but at the same time he has recognized the independent capacity of religion to exist as a cultural system and to shape individual thoughts and attitudes.
His own position of seeing the economy as «embedded» in sociopolitical contexts and social values opens the door for dialogue about the cultural - religious ethos and ethical, even explicitly theological, assessment of global processes.
For instance, citizens often act together through diverse associations, contexts, activities, and civic relationships in order to achieve their social ends and purposes independently of the state.
The book brings together a stunning array of past and present social commentary and data, making it an invaluable resource for putting «cultural revolution (s)» in context.
This is no «cold justice» and no impersonal interest in freedom for others; it is a passionate caring which can not be content unless it is doing something; and that is a something which is social in context yet also personal in its acceptance by each and every son and daughter of God.
from both Britain and the Continent have often failed to become involved in the discussion, even misconstruing its significance because of their radically altered historical context.5 In a recent article on evangelical identity, Gerald Sheppard goes so far as to claim that «inerrancy» is for American evangelicals «the official language of social identification, over against other so - called «nonevangelical» institutions.»
While these latter are important, we must probe more deeply for environment, functions, and context, and, most important of all, for human relation that define social roles and tell us who has power, who is aggressor, and who is victim.
In the context of such expectation, action for social justice was encouraged.
The interpreter has to look for that meaning which a biblical writer intended and expressed in his particular circumstances, and in his historical and cultural context, by means of such literary genres as were in use at his time, To understand correctly what a biblical writer intended to assert, due attention is needed both to the customary and characteristic ways of feeling, speaking and storytelling which were current in his time, and to the social conventions of the period.
If that social context is alert, open, and engaged, the writer's solitary quest for perfection is a little less lonely, and the reader's attempt to find the best new writing much easier.
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