Department of Sociology Podcasts
Ein Podcast von Oxford University
Kategorien:
54 Folgen
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Cees van der Eijk on “Contextualising Research Methods
Vom: 4.6.2015 -
Chris Zorn on ’Big Data' in the Social Sciences
Vom: 4.6.2015 -
John Fox on R software for teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 28.7.2014 -
Robert Johns on SPSS and Stata software for teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 28.7.2014 -
Wendy Olsen on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 28.1.2014 -
Robert Andersen on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 28.1.2014 -
Sean Carey on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 18.11.2013 -
Andrew Gelman on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 18.11.2013 -
Intergenerational relationships: Does grandparental childcare pay off?
Vom: 21.10.2013 -
Andy Field on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 9.9.2013 -
Anti-politics in action: Do European protesters hate formal politics more than the general public?
Vom: 28.8.2013 -
The Endtimes of Human Rights
Vom: 28.8.2013 -
Manfred te Grotenhuis on teaching quantitative methods to social science students
Vom: 27.8.2013 -
Updating what we know about intergenerational time and money transfers in the U.S.
Vom: 17.5.2013 -
Identifying age, period and cohort effects: Are the new methods really better?
Vom: 17.5.2013 -
Is there 'White Flight?' in England? Why Whites in Homogeneous English Wards Are More Opposed to Immigration
Vom: 17.5.2013 -
Solving the Mona Lisa Smile, and Other Developments in Micro-empirical sociology
Vom: 15.4.2013 -
A cooperative species: Human reciprocity and its evolution (Astor Visiting Lecture)
Vom: 13.3.2013 -
Changing Relationships: The Role of Cohabitation
Vom: 13.3.2013 -
Issue Attention and Demobilization: How Social Movements shape the Policy Agenda when Issues are in Decline
Vom: 13.3.2013
Podcasts from The Department of Sociology. Sociology in Oxford is concerned with real-world issues with policy relevance, such as social inequality, organised crime, the social basis of political conflict and mobilization, and changes in family relationships and gender roles. Our research is empirical, analytical, and comparative in nature, reaching far beyond British society, to encompass systematic cross-national comparison as well as the detailed study of Asian, European, Latin American and North American societies.