Sentences with phrase «sociologist robert»

Noted sociologist Robert Cialdini says that when you lead with a weakness, it demonstrates to the other person that you're honest enough to do so and knowledgeable enough to know both sides of an issue.
I still recall where I was sitting (actually, lying in bed) as I read Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life by sociologist Robert Bellah and colleagues.
Drexel University sociologist Robert Brulle and retired software engineer John Mashey found the connection between Donors Trust and the Koch family by looking through official tax records.
Occasional commenters like the sociologist Robert Phelan sometimes post enlightening comments placing it in a wider social and cultural context.
Sociologist Robert Brulle summarizes the rise of countermovements as follows:
The study, by Drexel University environmental sociologist Robert Brulle, is the first academic effort to probe the organizational underpinnings and funding behind the climate denial movement.
According to research conducted and published by Drexel University sociologist Robert Brulle, Scaife's family fortune funded climate change denial efforts to the tune of $ 39.6 milliob between 2003 - 2010, about seven per cent of all the cash spent on the climate change counter movement.
In a widely cited study, Drexel University sociologist Robert Brulle claimed to expose a vast network of organizations executing «a deliberate and organized effort to misdirect debate and distort the understanding of climate change.»
In a widely cited study, Drexel University sociologist Robert Brulle claims to expose a «Climate Change Counter Movement» that, from 2003 - 2010, enjoyed an average annual income of over $ 900 million.
A new study conducted by Drexel University environmental sociologist Robert J. Brulle, PhD, exposes the organizational underpinnings and funding behind the powerful climate change countermovement.
(The sociologist Robert Brulle has written on this habit quite a bit.)
To set the recent trend in broader context, check out sociologist Robert Brulle's graph tracking network news coverage of global warming and the following graph of newspaper coverage of climate change from 1980 to 2006 (a separate newspaper sample) from Dr. Boykoff's recent paper in Nature Reports — Climate Change:
A 2008 study by Harvard sociologist Robert Sampson concluded that growing up in a neighborhood of concentrated disadvantage has the same effect on a five - year - old's verbal ability as missing an entire year of school.
As Northwestern University sociologist Robert Gordon recently wrote, «Companies pay better - educated people higher wages because they are more productive.
Sociologist Robert Carini's 2002 review of 17 studies found that «unionism leads to modestly higher standardized achievement test scores, and possibly enhanced prospects for graduation from high school.»
UL sociologist Robert Gramling and William R. Freudenburg of UCSB, «two of the world's preeminent environmental scholars,» team up to publish an exposé on the problems leading up to the Deepwater Horizon spill disaster.
A new study conducted by Drexel University environmental sociologist Robert J. Brulle, PhD, exposes the organizational underpinnings and funding behind the powerful climate change countermovement.
Social infrastructure is just as important, says sociologist Robert Sampson
As sociologist Robert Bellah said: «Each individual must work out their own ultimate solutions and the most the church can do is to provide a favorable environment for doing so, without imposing on him a prefabricated set of answers.»
Berkeley sociologist Robert N. Bellah.
In his column today, Michael Gerson writes about a Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life event at which the sociologist Robert Putnam spoke.
Harvard sociologist Robert F. Bales has stated that the rate of alcoholism will tend to rise when a society by its attitude «positively suggests drinking to the individual as a means of relieving his inner tensions.»
This will provide space for the nuanced discussions between what sociologist Robert Nisbet called the «laissez - faire of social groups.»
My findings confirm what sociologist Robert Wuthnow discovered in his study of American religious life: people divorce economics from religion.
Exploring the influence of televangelism on American religion in his book The Struggle for America's Soul, Princeton sociologist Robert Wuthnow presents a typical, though hypothetical, case study: Mabel Miller.
One of the most useful is the study made by sociologist Robert Straus.3.
Sociologist Robert Bellah first applied the term «civil religion» to American politics in a 1967 essay.
dIn 1929, sociologists Robert and Helen Lynd published Middletown: A Study in Modern American Culture, an enduring work that was designed to study your average small American city over a long period.

Not exact matches

Sociologist Pontell and his colleagues Kitty Calavita, at U.C. Irvine, and Robert Tillman, at New York's St. John's University, have demonstrated this in a number of compelling academic studies.
«We just have this great big unknown out there about where all the money is coming from,» Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who studies money in the conservative movement, recently told me.
At the same time, climate - denier funding from family and corporate foundations — say, Exxon's foundation — has declined, according to Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who studies the climate change «counter-movement.»
Since the initial publication of Robert N. Bellah's widely reprinted 1967 essay on «Civil Religion in America,» theologians, historians and sociologists have given much attention to the phenomenon Bellah described.
There is an excellent book on the subject by the renowned Sociologist Dr. Robert N Bellah (Emeritus Professor in the U of California system), published by Harvard U Press: «Religion In Human Evolution».
Robert Straus, Sociologist on the faculty of the University of Kentucky Medical School, has said regarding alcoholism, «Those who drink constitute the «exposed population» from an epidemiological standpoint.»
Robert Wuthnow, sociologist of religion at Princeton University, has studied stewardship in the church and discovered that preachers do a good job of promoting stewardship.
Robert Sampson, a sociologist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., says that the study is «clever and well done,» but is cautious about how to interpret the results.
be2 was founded in April 2005 by sociologist Dr Robert Wuttke, and quickly expanded to over 30 countries.
«We're recommending a tool that is based on reality,» said Robert T. Michael, the chairman of a 13 - member panel of sociologists that drafted the report for the National Research Council's committee on national statistics.
Previous winners include Seung - Taek Lee, Eun - Me Ahn, Ceal Floyer, and Robert Adrian X (all 2009); philosopher and sociologist Bruno Latour (2010), and Doug Aitken (2012).
Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University, saw little evidence that such efforts could succeed.
One was Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who became a vital guide to the vast literature on behavioral impediments to environmental action.
Postscript, 11:45 a.m. Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University, noted in an email that the paper appears to have been finalized before publication in August of a report by the American Sociological Association Task Force on Climate Change and Sociology: «Climate Change and Society: Sociological Perspectives.»
Robert J. Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who focuses on environmental movements and environmental change, is quoted in my article.
One such scientist is Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University who has long studied the relationship of environmental incidents and policies.
Robert J. Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University, has for years been been a valuable guide for me to the large, and largely under - appreciated, body of behavioral research illuminating why it's so hard to gain traction on the super wicked problem of human - driven climate change.
Robert Brulle, a sociologist at Drexel University, tutored me through a series of recent e-mails on a body of research showing how bad conditions become unremarkable over time, making it harder to seek change.
@ Patrick B. Although I am a historian and hence see sociologists as disciplinary parasites who have appropriated history's domain to create a «science» of society, there have been valuable contributions by sociologists to our understanding of the history of science, notably in the work of Robert Merton.
In writing about the disinformation campaign, this website has often relied upon the work of Dr. Robert Brulle, a sociologist from Drexel University, and Dr. Riley Dunlap, a sociologist from the University of Oklahoma, along with a few other sociologists who have been examining the climate change disinformation campaign through the lens of sociology for over a decade.
In effect, the Donors Trust was bankrolling a movement, said Robert Brulle, a Drexel University sociologist who has extensively researched the networks of ultra-conservative donors.
The economist Robert Frank; the sociologist Theda Skocpol; the blogger Ezra Klein; and my Brookings colleagues Warwick McKibben, Adele Morris, and Peter Wilcoxen have all in the last few months proposed enacting a carbon tax for purposes of averting «Taxmageddon» and discouraging carbon pollution.
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