Sentences with phrase «victimhood culture»

The main issue here is how politics and culture have affected the norms of science; my explanation is multi-factorial and involves several inter-related, and each other reinforcing factors: the science - technology link, the rise of social sciences, science's social norms, victimhood culture, and, importantly, the political use of science.
Closely related to the precautionary principle, victimhood culture instills beliefs in scientists» minds that aggravate the crisis due to the demise of the ethos of traditional science.
[61] Facilitated, if not actively promoted, by the rise of the social sciences, victimhood culture had made its way from US colleges to European universities.
While the effects of victimhood culture are stronger in the social sciences and humanities, the natural and biological sciences, being constituencies of academic institutions, are by no means immune to this culture.
The moment that I set myself up as the «victim» of «journalism shaming,» not only do I take something away from people who have truly been victimized, but I add to the momentum of false victimhood culture while ignoring the words of Jesus about turning the other cheek.

Not exact matches

«So who cares if we are becoming a culture of victimhood
If Original Excuse comes as a package, so to speak, with Original Sin, he could hardly be naive about expecting mere rhetoric, no matter how brilliant, to uproot the culture of victimhood.
Indeed, her conspiracy theory fits right into the culture of victimhood and complaint.
Have we created a culture in which the status of victimhood is sufficiently desirable that many young men and women will go to remarkable lengths to establish an online victim identity?
What's most stunning about the anecdotes recounted by Dick's interviewees is how alike they are, and if his film doesn't delve quite deeply enough into the type of culture that breeds such conduct (specifically, the way in which the army projects strength as a masculine trait, thereby subconsciously disparaging female victimhood as an undesirable weakness), its spartan use of graphics and statistics conveys arguments with little grandstanding.
Class sessions that critiqued notions of social justice and multiculturalism, raised concerns about affirmative action or a culture of «victimhood,» advocated phonics and back - to - basics instruction, or were generally positive with regard to testing or choice - based reform were coded as «right leaning.»
-- Ajay Kurian from The Ballet of White Victimhood: On Jordan Wolfson, Petroushka, and Donald Trump empowering and unapologetic representations of Latin @x culture informed by the feminist and decolonial aesthetic traditions of the Americas
These three insights are especially important given the prevalence of «victimhood» in our culture - whining, self - pity, other - blaming and claims of personal blamelessness.
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