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2020
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Why do we need a social imagination? This year has for many brought into sharp focus the social basis of almost all major global challenges, be it the climate crisis, racial justice, or COVID-19. Reflecting on his career in and around the social sciences, Ziyad Marar, outlines why a social imagination is now more important than ever, and puts forward 10 ways in which social insights are central to resolving the challenges we currently face. I've spent my adult life in and around social science. Academically through studying psychology and linguistics (alongside philosophy), professionally through working at SAGE for over 30 years and personally through an abiding amateur interest in various fields sometimes expressed in my own writing of books or articles. In light of my recent election as a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. I've been reflecting on what social science has meant to me, and why my interest continues to this day. These reflections are a quite personal take. They are not meant to be a 'defence of social science' or a comprehensive review of its impact in various domains, though when people who aren't familiar with social science ask me what the point of it is; I find myself responding in this kind of vein. It's a personal view on why I think a social science imagination can benefit us as individuals and improve society more generally, especially at a time of such upheaval and reconfiguration.
2000
TO THE INDIVIDUAL social scientist who feels himself a part of the classic tradition, social science is the practice of a craft. A man at work on problems of substance, he is among those who are quickly made impatient and weary by elaborate discussions of method-and-theory-in-general; so much of it interrupts his proper studies. It is much better, he believes, to have one account by a working student of how he is going about his work than a dozen 'codifications of procedure' by specialists who as often as not have never done much work of consequence. Only by conversations in which experienced thinkers exchange information about their actual ways of working can a useful sense of method and theory be imparted to the beginning student. I feel it useful, therefore, to report in some detail how I go about my craft. This is necessarily a personal statement, but it is written with the hope that others, especially those beginning independent work, will make it less personal by the facts of their own experience.
TO THE INDIVIDUAL social scientist who feels himself a part of the classic tradition, social science is the practice of a craft. A man at work on problems of substance, he is among those who are quickly made impatient and weary by elaborate discussions of method-and-theory-in-general; so much of it interrupts his proper studies. It is much better, he believes, to have one account by a working student of how he is going about his work than a dozen 'codifications of procedure' by specialists who as often as not have never done much work of consequence. Only by conversations in which experienced thinkers exchange information about their actual ways of working can a useful sense of method and theory be imparted to the beginning student. I feel it useful, therefore, to report in some detail how I go about my craft. This is necessarily a personal statement, but it is written with the hope that others, especially those beginning independent work, will make it less personal by the facts of their own experience.
Historicity, International Research Journal, 2018
'Education is what breaks down cycles of poverty and oppression'. Sinead Burke 2. Abstract Social science has been a matter of continuous debate and reflection with specific reference to power distributions and decisions, social welfare and social justice, law and environment etc. But social science often invites a repetitive question i.e. whether social science is science? In prima-face it seems a simple question to answer but it includes enormous amount of doubts and issues of needed discourse. It is found in many parts the world that social science is unloved and sidelined subject for that matter when it comes to the visibility and accountability of it. Present reflective article attempts to reveal the questions posed before social science and what social science can offer to the world.
The Promise The sociological imagination, as defined by Wright Mills, gives us the capacity to connect the complex history of society with the different personal biography. First, the author mentioned about how people always feel that their lives are somehow a ride for endless troubles. And we often associate these problems with our very own actions. The logic behind this is somehow valid. With the current trend especially this time of modern age, all kinds of problems are somehow inevitable but what people fail to see is the interconnection between their own problems and the happenings in the society where they belong. But what is the purpose of sociological imagination? Our lives will mark a history and history cannot be made without any human interventions. In simple words, the concept of history and biography will always be interrelated. We will not be able to fathom history without scrutinizing personal biography. Even the problems we encountered are all contained by the frames of the changing society.
Cosmos and History the Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, 2009
this paper offers a restatement of Wright mills' The Sociological imagination and tries to judge whether its promise can be credibly renewed today by addressing the question about the present and future possibilities of the social sciences as free forms of enquiry. relying on Weber, mills and other thinkers, the paper sustains that the possibilities for a truly free social science essentially depend on three major 'conditions': the subjective stance or vocation, the sociological imagination proper, and an independent social science politics, conditions whose apt names can also be 'love' , 'insight' and 'courage'. an analysis of the presence and strength of each of these conditions in contemporary social science and in academia shows the magnitude of the task faced for the existence of a free social science.
2021
Full text of introductory lecture on the sociological imagination for first-semester first-year students.
Critical Sociology, 2002
In Georgios Papanagnou, ed., Social Science and Policy Challenges: Democracy, Values, and Capacities, Paris: UNESCO Publishing, pp. 25-56, 2012
If we want to empower and re-enchant social scientific research, we need to do three things. First, we must drop all pretence, however indirect, at emulating the success of the natural sciences in producing cumulative and predictive theory, for their approach simply does not work in any of the social sciences. (For the full argument see Flyvbjerg, 2001.) Second, we must address problems that matter to groups in the local, national and global communities in which we live, and we must do it in ways that matter; we must focus on issues of context, values and power, as advocated by great social scientists from Aristotle and Machiavelli to Max Weber and Pierre Bourdieu. Finally, we must effectively and dialogically communicate the results of our research to our fellow citizens, the ‘public’, and carefully listen to their feedback. If we do this – focus on specific values and interests in the context of particular power relations – we may successfully transform social scientific research into an activity performed in public for publics, sometimes to clarify, sometimes to intervene, sometimes to generate new perspectives, and always to serve as eyes and ears in ongoing efforts to understand the present and to deliberate about the future. We may, in short, arrive at social research that matters.
About indignation as a starting point for research.
Economy and Society, 2004
This paper is concerned with the power of social science and its methods. We first argue that social inquiry and its methods are productive: they (help to) make social realities and social worlds. They do not simply describe the world as it is, but also enact it. Second, we suggest that, if social investigation makes worlds, then it can, in some measure, think about the worlds it wants to help to make. It gets involved in 'ontological politics'. We then go on to show that its methodsand its politics -are still stuck in, and tend to reproduce, nineteenth-century, nation-statebased politics.
Journal of Business and Management Studies
American Journal of Archaeology, 2016
Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, 2021
Isna Rahmadhani Kustiawati, 2023
Fabrikart Arte Tecnologia Industria Sociedad, 2002
Abstracts Authors Text LZ, 2002
Strategic : Jurnal Pendidikan Manajemen Bisnis, 2019
L’economia della conoscenza: innovazione, produttività e crescita economica nei secoli XIII-XVIII / The knowledge economy: innovation, productivity and economic growth, 13th to 18th century, 2023
LA NUEVA CONSTITUCIÓN MEXICANA: UN RETO CONSTITUCIONAL Y LA OPORTUNIDAD DE UN MARCO JURÍDICO PARA LA ACCIÓN CLIMÁTICA GLOBAL, 2024
Organic Chemistry: Current Research, 2014
International Journal of Paleopathology, 2021
Journal of Water and Environment Technology, 2010
FEMS Microbiology Letters, 2004
The Lancet. Respiratory medicine, 2017
Journal of Cellular Neuroscience and Oxidative Stress, 2020
Statistics in medicine, 2015
Cognitive Neurodynamics, 2020
European Journal of Science and Theology , 2022