Tag: Sociology and Political Science

Generations are shaped by different futures in Hoyerswerda
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Explore how generations in postsocialist Hoyerswerda are shaped by divergent orientations toward capitalist futures rather than shared historical events, revealing futurity as central to.

TikTok refugees and RedNote users formed a cosmopolitan community
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Explores how TikTok users and RedNote natives built digital solidarity during the US TikTok ban, forming cosmopolitan communities through cultural exchange and everyday communication practices.

Religion linked to emigrant family functioning and identity
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Religion’s impact on Polish Catholic emigrant household functioning in Scotland, analyzing economic decision-making, social identity, and cultural adaptation through quantitative survey methodology.

Bette-Obudu women use daughters’ names to resist patriarchy
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Ethnographic investigation of female-child naming among Bette-Obudu women in Nigeria, examining how mothers use daughter-naming as resistance to patriarchal structures and assertion of female agency.

Bekasi labor candidates split votes, but coordination sometimes concentrated support
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Examines how Indonesia’s fragmented labor movement achieved electoral success in Bekasi’s 2019 legislative election through cross-union cooperation despite structural divisions and institutional.

Article traces the “imaginary” in technology, war, and security studies
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Explore how imaginaries shape technology, warfare, and great power competition. This article maps social, sociotechnical, and security imaginaries as analytical frameworks for international.

Negara kesatuan is framed as rooted in folk religious sensibility
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Analysis of negara kesatuan as a unitary state concept grounded in Indonesian folk religious theology rather than Western political theory, centered on the mystical metaphor of divine-human unity.

NGOization is linked to crisis in West Kalimantan legal aid
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in LawAnalysis of organizational crisis in West Kalimantan legal aid movement, examining how NGOization and technocratic governance undermine emancipatory praxis and advocacy autonomy.

Progressive bishops helped boost support for Brazil’s Workers’ Party
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Analysis of how progressive Catholic bishops in Brazil facilitated Workers’ Party electoral success by advocating redistribution, using papal transition as natural experiment.

Review links online misinformation to polarization and distrust
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Study of 157 publications revealing how online misinformation fuels ideological polarization and institutional distrust through tri-directional feedback loops, with strategic framework for.










