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1,159 Essays on Social Developments Danish. Documents 451 - 475 (showing first 1,000 results)

Last update: July 21, 2014
  • Social Pressures in Indian Writing

    Social Pressures in Indian Writing

    Social pressures and constraints are present in every society in the world. It doesn’t matter where a person lives, as long as they interact with other people from their society, they will be subjected to pressure. Everyone cares what other people think or say about them, and this leads them to start behaving in certain ways. This topic is also a recurring theme in every novel we’ve read up to now. Whether it’s Adela Quested

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    Essay Length: 2,893 Words / 12 Pages
    Submitted: January 13, 2010 By: Mike
  • An Approach to the Development of a Quality Metric for Electronic Learning

    An Approach to the Development of a Quality Metric for Electronic Learning

    Education is life long learning endeavor. It is a process of constantly elicitating, acquiring, organizing and integrating specialized knowledge into a single whole that can be used to help improve one's thinking skills. It is an exciting, relevant and vibrant process. The taxonomy of educational objectives can be found in Bloom (1956). He described the order of sequencing the content of the subject and assessing the learning progress based on the learner behavior. Educating, nevertheless

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    Essay Length: 2,657 Words / 11 Pages
    Submitted: January 14, 2010 By: Mike
  • Reflection Paper (concepts of Development)

    Reflection Paper (concepts of Development)

    Development, as we all know of it, is an event or a series of events which simply tell us whether our country is improving or if it is worsening. Development may depend on a country’s advancement on technology, continuous construction of infrastructure and the like. Furthermore, development has various concepts which were formulated to support its strategies for the good of our country. But with what our country is experiencing right now, do we have

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    Essay Length: 295 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 14, 2010 By: Artur
  • Corporate Social Responsibilty

    Corporate Social Responsibilty

    From a business perspective, working under government contracts can be a very lucrative proposition. In general, a stream of orders keep coming in, revenue increases and the company grows in the aggregate. The obvious downfalls to working in this manner is both higher quality expected as well as the extensive research and documentation required for government contracts. If a part fails to perform correctly it can cause minor glitches as well as problems that can

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    Essay Length: 2,033 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: January 14, 2010 By: July
  • Cognitive Development According to Piaget

    Cognitive Development According to Piaget

    Cognitive Development According to Piaget Cognitive development is defined as gradual orderly changes by which mental processes become more complex and sophisticated, or the scientific study of how human beings develop in certain orderly stages as they get older. The actual study of cognition refers to the process of knowing; it is the study of all mental activities related to acquiring, storing, and using knowledge (Microsoft, 2001, p.3). How we as humans develop cognitively

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    Essay Length: 1,528 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 14, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Social Isolation in the Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano

    Social Isolation in the Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano

    Olaudah Equiano in his Interesting Narrative is taken from his African home and thrown into a Western world completely foreign to him. Equiano is a slave for a total of ten years and endeavors to take on certain traits and customs of Western thinking. He takes great pains to improve himself, learn religion, and adopt Western mercantilism. However, Equiano holds on to a great deal of his African heritage. Throughout the narrative, the author keeps

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    Essay Length: 1,312 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: January 15, 2010 By: Janna
  • Implication of Of Geographical Indications in Wto on Developing Countries

    Implication of Of Geographical Indications in Wto on Developing Countries

    One of the most important developments in the millenium that had far reaching implications in the world economic systems is the formation and functioning of the WTO. To say the least, the economic history of the human kind can conveniently be divided into pre WTO era and post WTO era. While the WTO regime is compelling every country in the world to readjust, reformat, redesign their economic system to synchronise with WTO regime. Those countries

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    Essay Length: 817 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 15, 2010 By: Fonta
  • Real Estate Development Analysis

    Real Estate Development Analysis

    C LAMBCHOP DEVELOPMENTS DEVELOPMENT COMPARISON INTRODUCTION This report provides feasibility, cash flow and various risk analysis of the returns of two proposed developments with consideration for both Lambchop Developments, and for possible equity investor, Idaho Investments. The report will provide a summary of the analysis, a comparison of the developments and will make recommendations as to which development is most suitable both for the developer or investor. Target rates of return have been established by

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    Essay Length: 2,591 Words / 11 Pages
    Submitted: January 15, 2010 By: Jack
  • Personal Values Development

    Personal Values Development

    Personal values are the genuine beliefs and feelings that one donate. Deliberately, they develop into our ideals. A value is a faith, a duty, or the beliefs that is significant. Whether ones are deliberately conscious of them or not, every person has a core set of personal values. Values can variety from the ordinary, such as the belief in working hard and promptness, to the more mental, such as independence, distress for others, and concord

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    Essay Length: 435 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Max
  • Importance of Human Resource Development

    Importance of Human Resource Development

    IMPORTANCE OF HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT Human Resource is the most Important and vital Factor of Economic Development or it can be said that humans are the agents of development. some of the importance of Human Resource or Human Capital are. 1) Country Develops if The Human Resource is Developed: To enhance economic development the state constructs roads, buildings bridges, dams, power houses, hospitals, etc. to run these units doctors, engineers, scientist, teachers, are required. So

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    Essay Length: 499 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Tasha
  • Socially Responsible Supply Chains:

    Socially Responsible Supply Chains:

    Introduction Corporate Social Responsibility at Marks and Spencer has traditionally been interpreted as the provision of quality and value for money for the customers and a paternalistic regime for the large labour force of shop assistants. As 90 per cent of these were women cared for by women supervisors, perhaps �maternalistic’ would be a better word. However, a more important and original dimension of chain stores’ strategy has been the paternalism exhibited in relations with

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    Essay Length: 1,381 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Monika
  • Social Learning Theory

    Social Learning Theory

    Social learning theory In criminology, Ronald Akers and Robert Burgess (1966) developed Social Learning Theory to explain deviancy by combining variables which encouraged delinquency (e.g. the social pressure from delinquent peers) with variables that discouraged delinquency (e.g. the parental response to discovering delinquency in their children). [edit] Discussion Social Learning Theory was derived from the work of Gabriel Tarde (1912: 322) which proposed that social learning occurred through three stages of imitation: • close contact,

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    Essay Length: 735 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Fatih
  • Development of Immigration Policy in Japan

    Development of Immigration Policy in Japan

    Development of Immigration Policy in Japan I Introduction: Immigration Flow Any ЃgGaijinЃh that has come to Japan may have had the awkward feeling of an invisible barrier that is felt in the immigration policies of Japan. A country that is an island could be a reason of the peculiar (from the world standard) policies that the Japanese government has implemented throughout history. My paper is divided in four sections. The first point that we should

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    Essay Length: 5,814 Words / 24 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Fonta
  • Social Structure

    Social Structure

    Social Structure As it is said in the Dictionary of Social Sciences a social structure is the most basic, enduring, and determinative patterns in social life. A social structure refers to the fact of how individuals act one toward another according to their position in the interaction. These positions create what we know as a social structure. The three main causes of inequality from a status position in a society are: power, prestige and

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    Essay Length: 488 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Anna
  • The Development of Cloning

    The Development of Cloning

    The development of cloning Bioethics, which is the study of value judgments pertaining to human conduct in the area of biology and includes those related to the practice of medicine, has been an important aspect of all areas in the scientific field (Bernstein, Maurice, M.D.). It is one of the factors that says whether or not certain scientific research can go on, and if it can, under which rules and regulations it must abide by.

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    Essay Length: 821 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Vika
  • Is Sport an Area of Neighborhood Social Life Where Performance Counts and Race or Ethnicity Is Irrelevant?

    Is Sport an Area of Neighborhood Social Life Where Performance Counts and Race or Ethnicity Is Irrelevant?

    Topic: Structured Inequality: Neighborhood Sport and Race/Ethnicity Research Question: Is sport an area of neighborhood social life where performance counts and race or ethnicity is irrelevant? Neighborhoods in the United States are often segregated by race and have racial tensions. However, sport provides some opportunity for integration. Based on my reading for this assignment here is what seemed to be important points. Home neighborhoods matter more than sport in some instances, regardless of talent.

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    Essay Length: 2,758 Words / 12 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: regina
  • The Contrasting Views of Milton Friedman and Ralph Nader on Corporate Social Responsibility

    The Contrasting Views of Milton Friedman and Ralph Nader on Corporate Social Responsibility

    Corporation is a legal entity made of natural persons or other legal entities that holds legal identity within the society. Corporate social responsibility is the duty of a corporation to create wealth in ways that avoid harms to, protect, or enhance societal assets. The idea of Social Responsibility interrelates the obvious interrelationship between business corporations, government and American society, is based on the fundamental idea that the corporations have duties that go beyond carrying out

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    Essay Length: 573 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Top
  • School Social Workers

    School Social Workers

    A School Social Worker plays a major role in developing a student as a complete person. “School Social Workers provide a vital link among the school, home and community” (www.sswaa.org/about/career, retrieved 10/17/05). Nationwide school districts are now beginning to realize that a social worker in the school will help bridge the gap between home and education for students. Social work in general is a job that requires one to help others. And in this case,

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    Essay Length: 1,033 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Janna
  • Art of Story Telling: Story Development

    Art of Story Telling: Story Development

    Art of Story Telling: Story Development 10 components of story telling Exposition is introducing detail of character, situation or event Foreshadow is preparing the element, situation or event to do something (to indicate or suggest something, usually something unpleasant, that is going to happen) Point of Attack is the beginning of the story with unexpected situation or extraordinary event Inciting Incident is the first complication occurred to any character whom causes the change of the

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    Essay Length: 506 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: David
  • Liberalism and Social Contract

    Liberalism and Social Contract

    Liberalism and Social Contract Charles Larmore speaks of moral complexity as it exists in a pluralistic sense. The idea of pluralism says that each and every person has their own separate conception of the good as it appears to them. It is I virtually impossible to have to separate entities come up with the same exact concept of the "Good Life" and what it holds for them. As there are these conflicts ideals that exist

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    Essay Length: 559 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development Policy

    The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development Policy

    The Implementation of Tax Increment Financing as an Economic Development policy By: Randy L. Jacobs, J.D. ABSTRACT: With Tax Increment Financing (TIF) a municipality pays for economic development expenditures out of future increases in tax collection. The TIF method has achieved widespread popularity as a funding source to finance local infrastructure investment and improvements; however the TIF program has several shortfalls and many critisms. This paper will focus on the criticism that TIF programs are

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    Essay Length: 4,765 Words / 20 Pages
    Submitted: January 18, 2010 By: Anna
  • Origins and Developments of Capitalist Modernity Marx and Weber

    Origins and Developments of Capitalist Modernity Marx and Weber

    Marx is considered a modernist because his views and theories fit the meaning of Modernity, which are human freedom and the right to free choice. To Marx, Capitalism is a barrier to the notion of human freedom and choice. Five aspects of his political theory which are modern, is how he views human nature, effects of Capitalism on human natures with emphasis on significance of labour, class struggles within Capitalism, the demise of Capitalism

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    Essay Length: 962 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Parental Particpation for Social Justice in Education

    Parental Particpation for Social Justice in Education

    Parental participation: for socially just schooling Socially just schooling aims to offer every student an education of equality regardless of factors such as ethnicity, gender or social class. Often however, achieving social justice in schools can be complex when considering what lies outside classroom-control: a student's home environment and the level of their parents' participation. The film Take the Lead illustrates through two characters how schooling can be experienced differently by those from differing backgrounds.

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    Essay Length: 331 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Medi-Cult - a Danish Biotechnology Company

    Medi-Cult - a Danish Biotechnology Company

    Medi-Cult, a Danish biotechnology company, established in 1987 to exploit proprietary cell culture technology, supplies the media for use in the later stages of IVF and developed IVM (in vitro maturation) during the 1990s. This process involves maturing eggs from the ovary in vitro with the help of only a single dose of maturation medium patented by Medi-Cult. The major benefit of IVM in contrast to IVF is that it does not require the woman

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    Essay Length: 1,224 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: David
  • Historical Development in Nursing Research and Utilization

    Historical Development in Nursing Research and Utilization

    Collaborative Practice Paper This paper will be addressing a clinical case study from the writer's current experience that illustrates collaborative nursing practice. According to Schueller and Kimbrell (2003, p. 2), "When one refers to collaborative practice within a hospital setting, they are referring to healthcare personnel working together to care for patients and families". Collaboration is defined as "working together, especially in a joint intellectual effort to achieve a desired outcome; to cooperate" (American Heritage

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    Essay Length: 1,571 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: January 19, 2010 By: Mikki