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Requirement 1: Conceptual Assignment
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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 or urbanites.
Urban Culturalist 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.
Theory : A set of interrelated propositions or ideas intended to explain a phenomenon.
Suburbs : Settlements located outside the physical boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs.
Status : A social characteristic that locates individuals in relation to other people.
Work Exploratory : Poking around in the dark for anything that will help us describe and understand a little better what we knew very little about before.
Social Surveys : Provide a snapshot of what persons were thinking and doing in one place or from different settlements.
Slums : A heavily populated area characterized by substandard housing and squalor.
Proletariat : Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production.
Megalopolis : A continuous stretch of urban settlement that results from cities, suburbs, and towns merging together.
Overpopulation : An ecological condition in which a society is unable to support all its members with available technology and natural resources.
Inequality : The difference in access to and accumulation of wealth, educational opportunities, and cultural activities.
Industrialization : A process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations; it increases the number of people living near factories and relying on mechanically produced goods and services.
Immigrants : People who settle in a country in which they were born.
Gentrification : A process of community and neighborhood change where housing in older neighborhoods is restored, often resulting in higher rents and the displacement of previous tenants who can no longer afford to live there.
Ethnography : The study of social groups in their natural environment; it relies on participant observation and field research.
Ethnicity : A shared way of life reflected in language, religion, and material culture such as clothing and food, and cultural products such as music and art; often a key source of both social cohesion and social conflict.
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.
Deviance : Acts that violate the relative standards of conduct, expectations, or beliefs of a group, community, or society.
Demography : The study of the size, composition, growth, and distribution of human populations.
Community : Refers to a positive form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes.
Bourgeoisie : The owners of means of production and distribution in capitalist societies.
Assimilation : A process whereby members of ethnic or other minority groups change their practices to conform to the dominant culture.
Anomie : A condition characterized by the absence of confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group.
Alienation : A condition of being estranged or disassociated from other people, the products of one's work, and one's "self."
Requirement 1: Conceptual Assignment
Across:1. | The study of social groups in their natural environment; it relies on participant observation and field research. | 6. | The owners of means of production and distribution in capitalist societies. | 11. | Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production. | 16. | A process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations; it increases the number of people living near factories and relying on mechanically produced goods and services. | 19. | A heavily populated area characterized by substandard housing and squalor. | 21. | A condition of being estranged or disassociated from other people, the products of one's work, and one's "self." | 22. | A process whereby members of ethnic or other minority groups change their practices to conform to the dominant culture. | 23. | Refers to a positive form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes. | 24. | People who settle in a country in which they were born. | 25. | The difference in access to and accumulation of wealth, educational opportunities, and cultural activities. |
| | Down:1. | A shared way of life reflected in language, religion, and material culture such as clothing and food, and cultural products such as music and art; often a key source of both social cohesion and social conflict. | 2. | A process of community and neighborhood change where housing in older neighborhoods is restored, often resulting in higher rents and the displacement of previous tenants who can no longer afford to live there. | 3. | 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. | Provide a snapshot of what persons were thinking and doing in one place or from different settlements. | 5. | The movement of populations from rural to urban areas; the growth and development, and redevelopment, of cities. | 7. | An ecological condition in which a society is unable to support all its members with available technology and natural resources. | 8. | A set of interrelated propositions or ideas intended to explain a phenomenon. | 9. | A social characteristic that locates individuals in relation to other people. | 10. | The ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals or urbanites. | 12. | Poking around in the dark for anything that will help us describe and understand a little better what we knew very little about before. | 13. | Settlements located outside the physical boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs. | 14. | A continuous stretch of urban settlement that results from cities, suburbs, and towns merging together. | 15. | 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. | 17. | The study of the size, composition, growth, and distribution of human populations. | 18. | A condition characterized by the absence of confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group. | 20. | Acts that violate the relative standards of conduct, expectations, or beliefs of a group, community, or society. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Requirement 1: Conceptual Assignment
Across:1. | The study of social groups in their natural environment; it relies on participant observation and field research. | 6. | The owners of means of production and distribution in capitalist societies. | 11. | Workers who sell their labor to those who own the means of production. | 16. | A process that leads to an significantly increased proportion of a population engaged in specialized factory work and nonagricultural occupations; it increases the number of people living near factories and relying on mechanically produced goods and services. | 19. | A heavily populated area characterized by substandard housing and squalor. | 21. | A condition of being estranged or disassociated from other people, the products of one's work, and one's "self." | 22. | A process whereby members of ethnic or other minority groups change their practices to conform to the dominant culture. | 23. | Refers to a positive form of sustained social cohesion, interaction, and organization that exists between the larger society and individuals who have similar characteristics or attributes. | 24. | People who settle in a country in which they were born. | 25. | The difference in access to and accumulation of wealth, educational opportunities, and cultural activities. |
| | Down:1. | A shared way of life reflected in language, religion, and material culture such as clothing and food, and cultural products such as music and art; often a key source of both social cohesion and social conflict. | 2. | A process of community and neighborhood change where housing in older neighborhoods is restored, often resulting in higher rents and the displacement of previous tenants who can no longer afford to live there. | 3. | 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. | Provide a snapshot of what persons were thinking and doing in one place or from different settlements. | 5. | The movement of populations from rural to urban areas; the growth and development, and redevelopment, of cities. | 7. | An ecological condition in which a society is unable to support all its members with available technology and natural resources. | 8. | A set of interrelated propositions or ideas intended to explain a phenomenon. | 9. | A social characteristic that locates individuals in relation to other people. | 10. | The ways of life or cultures of people in cities; the myths, symbols, and rituals or urbanites. | 12. | Poking around in the dark for anything that will help us describe and understand a little better what we knew very little about before. | 13. | Settlements located outside the physical boundaries of a city that are adjacent to the city or to its other suburbs. | 14. | A continuous stretch of urban settlement that results from cities, suburbs, and towns merging together. | 15. | 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. | 17. | The study of the size, composition, growth, and distribution of human populations. | 18. | A condition characterized by the absence of confusion of social norms or rules in a society, community, or group. | 20. | Acts that violate the relative standards of conduct, expectations, or beliefs of a group, community, or society. |
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© 2015
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only