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Urban Search
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Industrialization : a process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations
urbanization : the movement of populations from rural to urban areas; the growth and development, and redevelopment, of cities
urbanism : the ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals of urbanites
Tocqueville : a classical urbanist who was an aristocrat in post revolutionary France, famous work includes Democracy in America
Gesellschaft : a German term that denotes relationships typified by an impersonal bureaucracy and contractual arrangement rather than informal ones based on kinship and family ties
Gemeinschaft : a German term that denotes a sense of close-knit community relations based on shared traditions and values
organic solidarity : social cohesion generated by increased specialization where people necessarily rely on the contributions of others to survive and succeed
cultural strangers : individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures
Karl Marx : urged us to not just interpret the world but to also change it, his theory is social relationships
Emile Durkheim : wrote The Division of Labor in Society and Elementary Forms of the Religious Life
Georg Simmel : suggested that modern cities generate conditions that predispose individuals to become reserved in their relationship with one another
mechanical solidarity : Social cohesion generated by a minimal division of labor where there is little differentiation in the kinds of labor that individuals engage in
The Chicago School : the first sociology department in the U.S. ran by W. I. Thomas
Urban Cultural Perspective : an approach to studying cities by uncovering the meanings and values people endow them with in order to understand the ways that people make sense of the city, themselves, and others
suburbs : settlements located outside the physical and political boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs
family : a set of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share the primary responsibility for reproduction and caring for members of a community or society
Evolutionary approach : compare the several historical stages through which cities in Western societies appear to have moved
Comparative approach : compare cities in more economically developed societies to cities in societies with less developed economies
city : a relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement
division of labor : the delegation and assignment of specialized tasks, jobs, or work to be completed by specified individuals, groups, categories, and classes of people
Urban Search
Across:| 3. | Social cohesion generated by a minimal division of labor where there is little differentiation in the kinds of labor that individuals engage in | | 6. | individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures | | 7. | a classical urbanist who was an aristocrat in post revolutionary France, famous work includes Democracy in America | | 9. | a relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement | | 10. | the delegation and assignment of specialized tasks, jobs, or work to be completed by specified individuals, groups, categories, and classes of people |
| | 11. | suggested that modern cities generate conditions that predispose individuals to become reserved in their relationship with one another | | 12. | the ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals of urbanites | | 14. | the first sociology department in the U.S. ran by W. I. Thomas | | 18. | social cohesion generated by increased specialization where people necessarily rely on the contributions of others to survive and succeed |
| | Down:| 1. | wrote The Division of Labor in Society and Elementary Forms of the Religious Life | | 2. | an approach to studying cities by uncovering the meanings and values people endow them with in order to understand the ways that people make sense of the city, themselves, and others | | 4. | a process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations | | 5. | urged us to not just interpret the world but to also change it, his theory is social relationships | | 8. | compare the several historical stages through which cities in Western societies appear to have moved |
| | 13. | a German term that denotes a sense of close-knit community relations based on shared traditions and values | | 15. | settlements located outside the physical and political boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs | | 16. | the movement of populations from rural to urban areas; the growth and development, and redevelopment, of cities | | 17. | a set of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share the primary responsibility for reproduction and caring for members of a community or society |
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Urban Search
Across:| 3. | Social cohesion generated by a minimal division of labor where there is little differentiation in the kinds of labor that individuals engage in | | 6. | individuals who are from different symbolic worlds or cultures | | 7. | a classical urbanist who was an aristocrat in post revolutionary France, famous work includes Democracy in America | | 9. | a relatively large, dense, and heterogeneously populated place or settlement | | 10. | the delegation and assignment of specialized tasks, jobs, or work to be completed by specified individuals, groups, categories, and classes of people |
| | 11. | suggested that modern cities generate conditions that predispose individuals to become reserved in their relationship with one another | | 12. | the ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals of urbanites | | 14. | the first sociology department in the U.S. ran by W. I. Thomas | | 18. | social cohesion generated by increased specialization where people necessarily rely on the contributions of others to survive and succeed |
| | Down:| 1. | wrote The Division of Labor in Society and Elementary Forms of the Religious Life | | 2. | an approach to studying cities by uncovering the meanings and values people endow them with in order to understand the ways that people make sense of the city, themselves, and others | | 4. | a process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations | | 5. | urged us to not just interpret the world but to also change it, his theory is social relationships | | 8. | compare the several historical stages through which cities in Western societies appear to have moved |
| | 13. | a German term that denotes a sense of close-knit community relations based on shared traditions and values | | 15. | settlements located outside the physical and political boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs | | 16. | the movement of populations from rural to urban areas; the growth and development, and redevelopment, of cities | | 17. | a set of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption who share the primary responsibility for reproduction and caring for members of a community or society |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only