RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
3,569 results for "de re publica" — page 96 of 179
ZC_3_21 — Degrowth Economics
Degrowth (décroissance in French) is an intellectual and political movement that challenges the foundational assumption of modern economics: that economic growth — measured by GDP — is inherently desirable, sustainable,
ZC_3_14 — Globalization: Flows, Frictions, and Fragmentation
Globalization refers to the intensification of worldwide social, economic, political, and cultural interconnections — the increasing flow of capital, goods, services, people, ideas, information, and cultural forms across
ZC_3_19 — Digital Divide and Information Inequality
The digital divide — the gap between populations with effective access to digital and information technologies and those without — has evolved from a simple binary (connected vs. unconnected) into a multi-dimensional fra
ZC_3_22 — Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is a framework articulated by Klaus Schwab (founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum) in his 2016 book The Fourth Industrial Revolution, describing a new phase of
ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge
Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi
ZC_3_13 — Human Rights: Universal Norms and Their Contested Foundations
Human rights — entitlements and protections considered inherent to all human beings regardless of nationality, ethnicity, sex, language, religion, or other status — constitute one of the most influential normative framew
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_18 — Disaster Resilience & Cultural Recovery: Anthropological Perspectives
Disaster resilience — the capacity of communities to absorb, adapt to, and recover from catastrophic events while maintaining essential functions and identity — is increasingly understood not as a property of infrastruct
ZC_5_17 — Ritual Efficacy Mechanisms: How Ritual Produces Real-World Effects
Ritual — formalized, repetitive, symbolic action that is culturally prescribed and often marked as distinct from ordinary behavior — is a universal feature of human societies, found in religious ceremonies, civic commemo
ZC_5_19 — Network Society — Castells
Manuel Castells (born 1942 in Hellín, Spain), professor at the University of Southern California and emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, produced one of the most ambitious sociological analyses of the lat
ZC_5_01 — Digital Anthropology and Online Communities
Digital anthropology — the study of human social life as it is mediated, shaped, and transformed by digital technologies — has emerged as one of the most rapidly growing subfields in the social sciences as online life ha
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_05 — Psychology of Religion & Spiritual Experience
The psychology of religion — the empirical study of religious and spiritual experience, belief, and behavior — was inaugurated by William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), which established that relig
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_4_19 — Disaster Resilience Anthropology: Cultural Adaptation to Catastrophe
Disaster anthropology — the study of how human societies prepare for, experience, respond to, and recover from catastrophic events — emerged as a distinct subfield through the work of Anthony Oliver-Smith (University of
ZC_4_12 — Economic Anthropology: Exchange, Reciprocity, and Value
Economic anthropology examines how human societies produce, distribute, and consume material goods and services — and how economic behavior is embedded in social relations, cultural meanings, kinship obligations, politic
ZC_4_09 — Visual Anthropology: Ethnographic Film and Image as Evidence
Visual anthropology — the study of human societies through visual media (photography, film, video, digital platforms) and the anthropological analysis of visual systems — occupies a unique position at the intersection of
ZC_4_13 — Indigeneity and Indigenous Rights
Indigeneity and Indigenous rights address the political, legal, cultural, and territorial claims of peoples who identify as Indigenous — the original inhabitants of territories subsequently colonized by settlers, with di
ZC_4_08 — Structuralism in Social Science — Lévi-Strauss to Bourdieu
Structuralism — the intellectual movement that sought to uncover the deep, universal structures underlying the surface diversity of human cultures, languages, myths, kinship systems, and social institutions — was the dom
ZC_4_22 — Urban Anthropology & City as Culture
Urban anthropology — the ethnographic study of life in cities — has grown from a marginal subfield to one of the most vital areas in contemporary social science as humanity has become a predominantly urban species: since
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