The concept of the social in uniting the humanities and social sciences

2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (05) ◽  
pp. 52-2837-52-2837
2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 156-176
Author(s):  
Xuedian Wang

China as a whole is facing a marked trend toward indigenization. The past thirty years have seen rapid and profound changes in the social sciences, heralding a new season in the humanities, in which the study of traditional culture has shifted from the sidelines to the center of academic research. Traditional culture, especially Confucianism, with its worldly orientation, is bound to play a central role in deepening and expanding the ongoing conversation with liberalism. At the same time, however, it must still develop values for structuring society and everyday life that are as influential as those of liberalism. The three main challenges to a Confucian revival today are the ruling ideology in China (namely, Marxism), the dominance of Western sociopolitical theory, and the current practices of disciplinary organization.


2020 ◽  
pp. 4-26
Author(s):  
Alexander Ali-Zade ◽  

The article is devoted to the issues of modern research methodology in the humanities and social sciences. It examines the growing interest of the research community and methodologists of science in the field of humanities and social sciences in the use of mixed research methods - a combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis. It is concluded that the current interest of researchers in the use of mixed methods possibly indicates the formation in the humanities and social sciences of a new research paradigm based on the development of the methodology of mixed methods as an independent methodology.


2011 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 17-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Madsen

Since the beginning of the Reform Era in 1979, there has been a rapid growth and development of religious belief and practice in China. A substantial new scholarly literature has been generated in the attempt to document and understand this. This essay identifies the most important contributions to that literature and discusses areas of agreement and controversy across the literature. Along with new data, new paradigms have developed to frame research on Chinese religions. The paradigm derived from C. K. Yang's classic work in the 1960s came from structural functionalism, which served to unite research in the humanities and social sciences. However, structural functionalism has been abandoned by the new generation of scholars. In the humanities, the most popular paradigm derives from Michel Foucault, but there are also scholars who use neo-Durkheimian and neo-Weberian paradigms. In the social sciences, the dominant paradigms tend to focus on state-society relations. None of these paradigms fully captures the complexity of the transformations happening in China. We recommend greater dialogue between the humanities and social sciences in search of more adequate theoretical frameworks for understanding Chinese religions today.


2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor T. Oliva

Purpose For most college and university libraries, deselection of monographs should be an essential component of collection development. Few of these libraries have unlimited space for book stack expansion. This research study aims to cover the reasons why this should be undertaken and how it can be accomplished in the humanities and social sciences. At the main campus of Adelphi University Libraries, a conservative approach was used to identify and carefully review monograph titles that were published more than 50 years ago, and, in most cases, this resulted in their deselection without significantly affecting the collection. For some of these titles, the author determined that they might be worth replacing with available e-books and the author did so. Design/methodology/approach A brief overview is provided to delineate why deselection is important, and how it can be accomplished. A literature review was prepared. It included a review of deselection at small-, medium- and large-sized college and university libraries. The pros and cons of print versus e-books for collection development were reviewed, including four case studies. The feasibility of replacing print reference titles with e-books was also covered. A review of the monograph weeding project at the Adelphi University Library in the humanities and social sciences is provided. Conclusions and a projection of next steps are also included. Findings An overwhelming majority of the monograph titles reviewed were deselected without adversely affecting the overall quality of the collection. A small number of available e-book editions were selected to replace some of these deselected titles. Research limitations/implications All of the titles deselected were published more than 50 years ago. All of these titles were in the social sciences and humanities. The deselection review was limited to philosophy, religion, history, political science, sociology, education and psychology. There were limitations on the amount of time available to review titles in most of these fields, and as a result, only a small percentage of the titles in our collection could be reviewed. Practical implications The library has very serious space constraints, which has made it difficult to provide the needed study space for members of the Adelphi University community. Some sections of the book collection are jam packed, with no room for expansion. Deselecting older less used titles and eliminating some sections of book shelves help address both of these problems. Replacing some of these print titles with e-books contributes as well. This deselection project has reduced the holdings of monograph print titles significantly. In the future, the author hopes to rely less on print titles and more on e-books for collection development. Social implications In most fields, college and university students would be better served for their research by more recently published titles. Older, less used titles, as well as those not used at all, should be deselected to make room for more useful and up-to-date titles. As more and more titles become readily available as e-books, the collections of print titles can be reduced. Being able to use e-books even when the library is closed is a great advantage. It should also be noted that these titles can be used by more than one user simultaneously. Originality/value In conducting the literature search, the author discovered that there were a large number of titles on deselecting print titles. There was also considerable research on e-book collection development. However, there were few that linked these two important topics. In this research article and case study, the author hopes to have made a significant contribution to linking them together.


1976 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Audrey Forster ◽  
John McKinnirey

This paper discusses the effectiveness and ultimate value of the growing number of research institutes in the humanities and social sciences. It looks at the different types in existence and their geographic distribution. It considers the motivation for and obstacles to establishing research institutes, points to the difficulties involved in their funding and operation and outlines arguments put forward by their proponents. Illustrated with examples are different objectives and functions of various kinds of institutes, their organizational structure and their relationship to the universities. The Max-Planck Institutes in Germany and Institutes of the Social Science Research Council in Britain are described. The paper concludes with a sketch of three fundamental types of institute, each with its own rationale: the academic Utopia, the small-scale institute for research in the humanities and the problem-solving or mission-oriented institute.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 191-207
Author(s):  
Ludwig Salgo

The relationship between the law of parent and child and the humanities/social sciences seems to be so obvious that a clarification and systematization of this relationship is regarded as unnecessary. The call for an integration of the humanities and the social sciences in legal studies and legal practice was very pronounced during the 1980s and 1990s. This integration has been partially realized back then, but was revoked later on. The need for taking findings from the humanities and social sciences in law studies, legislation, and legal practice into account is more relevant now than it was ever before. In the present treatise, only the disciplines’ interwoven areas pertaining to the law of parent and child can be identified. Regarding the law of parent and child, there is reasonable hope that legislation and legal practice by means of drawing on and integrating humanities’ and social sciences’ methods and knowledge bases may be able to find alternatives that meet the best interest of the child (or at least constitute the least detrimental alternative). Zusammenfassung Die Beziehung zwischen Kindschaftsrecht und den Human-/Sozialwissenschaften ist so offensichtlich, dass eine Klärung und Systematisierung dieses Verhältnisses überflüssig schien. Der Ruf nach einer Integration der Human- und Sozialwissenschaften in Rechtswissenschaft und in Rechtsanwendung war in den 1970er und 1980er Jahren des vergangenen Jahrhunderts en vogue; sie wurde in Ansätzen verwirklicht, aber auch wieder zurückgenommen. Die Notwendigkeit, Erkenntnisse der Human-/Sozialwissenschaften in der Familienrechtswissenschaft, der Gesetzgebung und der Rechtspraxis zu beachten, ist aktueller denn je. In dieser Abhandlung können lediglich die Berührungsbereiche am Beispiel des Kindschaftsrechts aufgezeigt werden. Für das Kindschaftsrecht besteht die berechtigte Hoffnung, dass Gesetzgebung und Rechtsanwendung unter Heranziehung und Einbeziehung human-/sozialwissenschaftlicher Methoden und Wissensbestände noch am ehesten eine dem Wohl des Kindes am besten gerecht werdende ‒ besser: eine dem Wohl des Kindes am wenigsten schädliche ‒ Alternative finden.


2000 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-96
Author(s):  
McKenzie Wark

After decades of relative neglect, McLuhan is back. While his ideas on media form are receiving a long-overdue assessment, it is also worth recalling McLuhan's challenge to the form of scholarship as media. McLuhan's ‘probes' were designed to produce, in the long run, precisely the kind of stimulus they are now, finally, provoking. However, McLuhan's writing is not that easily assimilable to mainstream humanities and social sciences scholarship. The paradox of McLuhan is that his Catholic faith enabled him to put in question the sacred cows of humanism, such as the faith in the ‘social’ and in ‘culture’ that limits sociology and cultural studies in their attempts to grapple with media.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Belli ◽  
Juan C Aceros ◽  
Rom Harré

Rom Harré is one of the most important figures in academia of recent decades. Born in New Zealand he developed most of his career in Oxford. Influenced by authors such as John Austin, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Lev Vygotsky, Harré has produced his own and innovative approach to humanities and social sciences topics. His writings on philosophy of science have been focused on destabilizing the central doctrines of logical empiricism and positivism. However, his work has been not only influential in philosophy but also in other fields. This paper introduces his main contributions to psychology in general and social psychology in particular. It presents an interview with Rom Harré which outlines an approach to the author and his contributions to the social psychology crisis. Some key concepts in social sciences and in Rom's own work are also addressed, and research lines he advises to follow in the next decade are examined. The interview depicts Rom Harré as a scholar who crosses the boundaries between different disciplines and places.


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