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Urbanicity
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Karl Marx: The man who famously urged us to not just interpret the world but to change it.
Alexis de Tocqueville: An aristocrat in the post-revolutionary France who played multiple roles throughout his life, Historian, Politician, Social Observer.
Emile Durkheim: Believed that the idea that healthy communities cannot exist in cities and can only be found in rural villages depends on what we mean by healthy.
Max Weber: He used a comparative framework that discussed the wide variety of cities beyond the Western world and across various time periods.
Gesellschaft: This is the modern city, characterized by rampant individualism that trumps community interests. Relationships are less about personal ties and more about business.
Biographical Strangers: Individuals who do not know each other on a personal basis or who have never met.
Postmodernism: An approach to studying social life that rejects modernist beliefs in scientific knowledge, progress, and "grand theories"; relies on notions of fragmentation and disorganization.
Third Places: Locations that serve a social need beyond work and home life (example: a local coffee shop.
Community: Refers to a (positive, though not necessarily so form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes (example: ethnicity, geography, beliefs)
Cultural Strangers: Individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures.
Enclave: Bound to a particular place, like a neighborhood, characterized by the proliferation of commercial establishments and other institutions particularly suited to serving the needs of the resident group.
Proletariat: Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production.
Gang: A group of individuals that engage in common activities, many of which may violate codified laws and regulations.
The Chicago School: A collection of scholars from University of Chicago in the early decades of the 20th century whose qualitative and quantitative empirical studies of Chicago and related theoretical contributions helped define urban sociology as a significant sub discipline.
Social Capital: The value of social networks and organizations to get things done together that comes from peoples’ relationships with one another.
Anomie: A condition characterized by the absence or confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group.
City: A relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement.
Creative Class: A population of individuals with high amounts of “cultural capital” who tend to work in arts and technology fields.
Urban ecologists: Promoted the point of view that human community life functioned like other biological communities. Like any other organism, human beings must adapt to their surroundings and fend off potential dangers.
Urbanism: The ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals or urbanites.
Urban Political Economy: An approach to studying cities by investigating the ways that power relations influence the distribution of scarce resources.
Civic Association: A voluntary organization consisting of individuals with common social and cultural interests and concerns.
Bourgeoisie: The owners of the means of production and distribution in capitalist societies.
Urbanicity
Across:3. | An approach to studying cities by investigating the ways that power relations influence the distribution of scarce resources. | 4. | The value of social networks and organizations to get things done together that comes from peoples’ relationships with one another. | 8. | He used a comparative framework that discussed the wide variety of cities beyond the Western world and across various time periods. | 9. | Believed that the idea that healthy communities cannot exist in cities and can only be found in rural villages depends on what we mean by healthy. | 10. | Bound to a particular place, like a neighborhood, characterized by the proliferation of commercial establishments and other institutions particularly suited to serving the needs of the resident group. | 12. | Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production. |
| 13. | Individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures. | 15. | A relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement. | 16. | An approach to studying social life that rejects modernist beliefs in scientific knowledge, progress, and "grand theories"; relies on notions of fragmentation and disorganization. | 17. | The ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals or urbanites. | 19. | A population of individuals with high amounts of “cultural capital” who tend to work in arts and technology fields. |
| | Down:1. | Locations that serve a social need beyond work and home life (example: a local coffee shop. | 2. | A condition characterized by the absence or confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group. | 5. | Promoted the point of view that human community life functioned like other biological communities. Like any other organism, human beings must adapt to their surroundings and fend off potential dangers. | 6. | The man who famously urged us to not just interpret the world but to change it. |
| 7. | This is the modern city, characterized by rampant individualism that trumps community interests. Relationships are less about personal ties and more about business. | 11. | The owners of the means of production and distribution in capitalist societies. | 14. | Refers to a (positive, though not necessarily so form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes (example: ethnicity, geography, beliefs) | 18. | A group of individuals that engage in common activities, many of which may violate codified laws and regulations. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Urbanicity
Across:3. | An approach to studying cities by investigating the ways that power relations influence the distribution of scarce resources. | 4. | The value of social networks and organizations to get things done together that comes from peoples’ relationships with one another. | 8. | He used a comparative framework that discussed the wide variety of cities beyond the Western world and across various time periods. | 9. | Believed that the idea that healthy communities cannot exist in cities and can only be found in rural villages depends on what we mean by healthy. | 10. | Bound to a particular place, like a neighborhood, characterized by the proliferation of commercial establishments and other institutions particularly suited to serving the needs of the resident group. | 12. | Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production. |
| 13. | Individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures. | 15. | A relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement. | 16. | An approach to studying social life that rejects modernist beliefs in scientific knowledge, progress, and "grand theories"; relies on notions of fragmentation and disorganization. | 17. | The ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals or urbanites. | 19. | A population of individuals with high amounts of “cultural capital” who tend to work in arts and technology fields. |
| | Down:1. | Locations that serve a social need beyond work and home life (example: a local coffee shop. | 2. | A condition characterized by the absence or confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group. | 5. | Promoted the point of view that human community life functioned like other biological communities. Like any other organism, human beings must adapt to their surroundings and fend off potential dangers. | 6. | The man who famously urged us to not just interpret the world but to change it. |
| 7. | This is the modern city, characterized by rampant individualism that trumps community interests. Relationships are less about personal ties and more about business. | 11. | The owners of the means of production and distribution in capitalist societies. | 14. | Refers to a (positive, though not necessarily so form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes (example: ethnicity, geography, beliefs) | 18. | A group of individuals that engage in common activities, many of which may violate codified laws and regulations. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only