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Book ChapterDOI

A Risk Society

Yi Hu
- pp 179-193
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TLDR
The concept of risk society was first introduced by the German sociologist Ulrich Beck in Risk Society in 1986 as discussed by the authors, where he argued that the modern society had deviated from (Karl Marx's) class society or (Max Weber's) industrial society and had developed into a social form that is highly modern, known as risk society.
Abstract
“Risk society” is a concept that was first framed by the German sociologist Ulrich Beck in Risk Society in 1986. In Beck’s view, the modern society had deviated from (Karl Marx’s) class society or (Max Weber’s) industrial society and had developed into a social form that is highly modern, known as the “risk society.” Social theories based on unequal distribution of wealth (the functional theory, Marxism, and various kinds of postindustrial or postmodern theories that derived from it) have lost their interpretability when it comes to the crisis and inequality in the distribution of risks. Therefore, there needs to be a turn in social theories, that is to say, “risk sociology” needs to be advanced with problem awareness being “how to avoid, minimize, and direct risks or hazards systematically created as a part of modernization.”

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Culture of Disengagement in Engineering Education

TL;DR: In this paper, the importance of training ethical, socially conscious engineers has been discussed, but does US engineering education actually encourage neophytes to take seriously their professional responsibili...
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Shifting inequalities? Patterns of exclusion and inclusion in emerging forms of political participation

Abstract: Participation patterns in industrialized democracies have changed considerably in the last couple of decades. While institutionalized forms of participation (e.g., party membership) are declining, we can observe a rise in the occurrence of non-institutionalized forms of political participation. In this article we pose the question of what the effect of this trend has been for patterns of political stratification during the period 1974–2002 using the Political Action Survey as well as the European Social Survey. It can be observed that gender differences have been substantially reduced and in some cases even reversed for non-institutionalized participation and women tend to be more active in these forms than men. Younger age groups also clearly have a preference for non-institutionalized forms. Stratification based on education, however, remains the same compared to the 1970s. These findings are confirmed by a longitudinal analysis of Dutch Election Studies data for the period 1971–1998. We conclu...
References
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Book

The peasant economy and social change in North China

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a character list of places in the early Qing and discuss the economic evolution and social change of small-peasant and estate economies of early Qing.
Journal ArticleDOI

State planning commission

M. A. Pertsev
- 01 Feb 1971 -