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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Reaction Formation Evaluated Through Psychoanalytic And Sociocultural Lens, Russell Cook Dec 2020

Reaction Formation Evaluated Through Psychoanalytic And Sociocultural Lens, Russell Cook

CCRE Publications

No abstract provided.


Evaluating Depressive And Anxious Tendencies Based On Age, Gender, And Physical Activity In Spinal Cord Injury Patients, Russell Cook Sep 2020

Evaluating Depressive And Anxious Tendencies Based On Age, Gender, And Physical Activity In Spinal Cord Injury Patients, Russell Cook

CCRE Publications

No abstract provided.


Psychology: The Science Of Human Potential, Jeffrey Levy Jan 2019

Psychology: The Science Of Human Potential, Jeffrey Levy

Psychology (OER)

No abstract provided.


Youth Who Are Homeless: A Closer Look, Jacquilin Barrett Jan 2019

Youth Who Are Homeless: A Closer Look, Jacquilin Barrett

Petersheim Academic Exposition

No abstract provided.


The Cost Of Being Poor: Entering Foster Care And Losing Hope, Stephanie Nieto Jan 2019

The Cost Of Being Poor: Entering Foster Care And Losing Hope, Stephanie Nieto

Petersheim Academic Exposition

No abstract provided.


2017 Petersheim Academic Exposition Schedule Of Events, Seton Hall University Apr 2017

2017 Petersheim Academic Exposition Schedule Of Events, Seton Hall University

Petersheim Academic Exposition

2017 Petersheim Academic Exposition


Bargaining With The Machine: A Framework For Describing Encounters With Surveillance Technologies, Robert Pallitto Jan 2013

Bargaining With The Machine: A Framework For Describing Encounters With Surveillance Technologies, Robert Pallitto

Political Science Publications

Relationships between surveillance and inequality (e.g., as surveillance is used for domination, as surveillance affects subjects’ life-chances) have been a central concern of surveillance studies scholars. This concern with inequalities that are produced and sustained by surveillance runs parallel to the longstanding interest of many social theorists more generally with the unequal workings of power in nominally free societies. How is inequality sustained without resort to force? Why do people consent to subjugation? Some form of ideology critique is often employed to answer such questions. However, the work of Rosen (1996) and others has cast serious doubt on the ability …