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ZB_4_02 — Extremophiles and Extreme Biology
Extremophiles are organisms that thrive in conditions lethal to most life — extreme heat, cold, acidity, radiation, pressure, salinity, or desiccation. Their discovery has fundamentally expanded understanding of life's b
ZC_3_03 — Sociology of Work and Labor
Sociology of work examines how labor is organized, experienced, and transformed by economic, technological, and social forces. Karl Marx argued that under capitalism, workers experience alienation — estrangement from the
ZC_5_10 — Sociology of Disaster: Vulnerability, Resilience, and Social Amplification of Risk
The sociology of disaster studies the social dimensions of catastrophic events — earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, pandemics, industrial accidents, nuclear meltdowns, wildfires, and increasingly, climate-driven extreme ev
ZC_5_06 — Environmental Sociology: Risk, Justice, and Ecological Modernization
Environmental sociology studies the reciprocal relationships between human societies and their natural environments — how social structures, economic systems, political institutions, cultural beliefs, and power relations
ZC_5_11 — Digital Sociology: Platforms, Surveillance Capitalism, and Algorithmic Governance
Digital sociology examines how digital technologies — the internet, social media platforms, smartphones, algorithms, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and digital infrastructure — transform social life, institutio
ZC_5_13 — Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture, and Sapir-Whorf
Linguistic anthropology — one of the four traditional subfields of American anthropology (alongside cultural, biological/physical, and archaeological anthropology) — studies the relationships between language and social
ZC_1_10 — Environmental Psychology
Environmental psychology examines the transactions between individuals and their physical surroundings — how built and natural environments influence human behavior, cognition, emotion, and well-being, and reciprocally,
ZC_1_01 — Social Psychology — Conformity, Obedience, and Group Dynamics
Social psychology examines how individuals think, feel, and behave in social contexts. Landmark experiments by Milgram (obedience to authority), Asch (conformity to majority opinion), and Zimbardo (situational power of r
ZC_1_09 — Psychology of Leadership
Leadership psychology investigates the traits, behaviors, and situations that enable individuals to influence, motivate, and direct others toward collective goals — one of the most extensively studied and practically imp
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_1_11 — Psychology of Time
The psychology of time encompasses how humans perceive duration, orient themselves across past-present-future, and how temporal cognition influences decision-making, memory, motivation, and well-being.
ZC_1_12 — Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Industrial-organizational (I/O) psychology applies psychological principles to workplace behavior — encompassing personnel selection, performance evaluation, motivation, leadership, organizational culture, team dynamics,
ZC_1_02 — Cult Psychology — Manipulation, Totalism, and Recovery
Cult psychology examines how high-demand groups employ systematic influence techniques to recruit, retain, and control members. Key frameworks include Robert Jay Lifton's eight criteria of thought reform, Steven Hassan's
ZC_4_02 — Kinship Systems and Social Organization Across Cultures
Kinship — the system of social relationships and categories through which human societies classify relatives, define obligations, regulate marriage, organize inheritance, and structure political authority — is the founda
ZC_4_17 — Food Anthropology: Culture, Identity, and Power at the Table
Food anthropology examines how the production, preparation, distribution, and consumption of food encode cultural meaning, reinforce social hierarchies, and express identity. Claude Lévi-Strauss proposed the "culinary tr
ZC_4_11 — Anthropology of Death: Mortuary Practices, Grief, and the Afterlife
The anthropology of death examines how human societies construct, perform, and give meaning to dying, death, the disposal of the dead, mourning, and beliefs about postmortem existence — revealing that mortuary practices
ZC_4_03 — Ethnomusicology — Music as Social Phenomenon
Ethnomusicology — the study of music in its cultural context, or more precisely, the study of music as culture and culture as expressed through music — emerged in the mid-20th century from the older discipline of "compar
ZC_2_09 — Sociology of Gender and Sexuality
The sociology of gender and sexuality examines how societies construct, enforce, and contest gender categories and sexual norms. The sex-gender distinction (introduced to sociology by Ann Oakley, Sex, Gender and Society,
ZC_2_13 — Economic Sociology and Markets
Economic sociology examines how social structures, institutions, and cultural meanings shape economic life — rejecting the neoclassical assumption that markets operate according to purely rational, self-interested calcul
ZC_2_15 — Media Studies and Communication Theory
Media studies and communication theory examine how media technologies and institutions produce, distribute, and shape public meaning. Marshall McLuhan (Understanding Media, 1964) argued "the medium is the message" — the
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