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Classical Approaches To Work Key Terms
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Objectification : the product of human labour on raw materials
Alienation : a condition of workers in a capitalist economy, resulting from a lack of identity with the products of their labor and a sense of being controlled or exploited.
Exploitation : the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work.
Capitalism : an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
Labour Process : the production process at work, including the authority relations therein
Mechanical Solidarity : solidarity based on similarity and mutual independence
Organic Solidarity : solidarity based on difference and mutual interdependence
Ideal Type : a theoretical abstraction, an artificial and one-sided extrapolation of important traits or characteristics that simultaneously suppresses unimportant traits
Anomie : Durkheim's argument that, under certain conditions of major and rapid change, the prevailing morality would temporarily disintegrate, leading society to become a jungle of selfishness until such time as a new collective morality prevailed
Domestic Labour : a blanket term often associated with housework, involving all unpaid activities related to the production and reproduction of a household.
Gemeinshchaft : community forms of society
Gesellschaft : societal forms representing mere associations where solidarity was disintegrating
Laissez faire : the principle of non-interference on the part of the government in business affairs; the opposite of mercantilism
Social Stratification : a system by which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy
Classical Approaches To Work Key Terms
Across:4. | the production process at work, including the authority relations therein | 7. | a system by which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy | 10. | societal forms representing mere associations where solidarity was disintegrating | 11. | community forms of society | 12. | Durkheim's argument that, under certain conditions of major and rapid change, the prevailing morality would temporarily disintegrate, leading society to become a jungle of selfishness until such time as a new collective morality prevailed | 14. | solidarity based on similarity and mutual independence |
| | Down:1. | solidarity based on difference and mutual interdependence | 2. | a blanket term often associated with housework, involving all unpaid activities related to the production and reproduction of a household. | 3. | a condition of workers in a capitalist economy, resulting from a lack of identity with the products of their labor and a sense of being controlled or exploited. | 5. | an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state. | 6. | the product of human labour on raw materials | 8. | the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work. | 9. | the principle of non-interference on the part of the government in business affairs; the opposite of mercantilism | 13. | a theoretical abstraction, an artificial and one-sided extrapolation of important traits or characteristics that simultaneously suppresses unimportant traits |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Classical Approaches To Work Key Terms
Across:4. | the production process at work, including the authority relations therein | 7. | a system by which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy | 10. | societal forms representing mere associations where solidarity was disintegrating | 11. | community forms of society | 12. | Durkheim's argument that, under certain conditions of major and rapid change, the prevailing morality would temporarily disintegrate, leading society to become a jungle of selfishness until such time as a new collective morality prevailed | 14. | solidarity based on similarity and mutual independence |
| | Down:1. | solidarity based on difference and mutual interdependence | 2. | a blanket term often associated with housework, involving all unpaid activities related to the production and reproduction of a household. | 3. | a condition of workers in a capitalist economy, resulting from a lack of identity with the products of their labor and a sense of being controlled or exploited. | 5. | an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state. | 6. | the product of human labour on raw materials | 8. | the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work. | 9. | the principle of non-interference on the part of the government in business affairs; the opposite of mercantilism | 13. | a theoretical abstraction, an artificial and one-sided extrapolation of important traits or characteristics that simultaneously suppresses unimportant traits |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only