167 research outputs found
Swimming in a Sea of Shame: Incorporating Emotions into Explanations of Institutional Reproduction and Change
We theorize the role in institutional processes of what we call the shame nexus, a set of shame-related constructs: felt shame, systemic shame, sense of shame, and episodic shaming. As a discrete emotion, felt shame signals to a person that a social bond is at risk and catalyzes a fundamental motivation to preserve valued bonds. We conceptualize systemic shame as a form of disciplinary power, animated by personsâ sense of shame, a mechanism of ongoing intersubjective surveillance and self-regulation. We theorize how the duo of the sense of shame and systemic shame drives the self-regulation that underpins personsâ conformity to institutional prescriptions and institutional reproduction. We conceptualize episodic shaming as a form of juridical power used by institutional guardians to elicit renewed conformity and reassert institutional prescriptions. We also explain how episodic shaming may have unintended effects, including institutional disruption and recreation, when it triggers sensemaking among targets and observers that can lead to the reassessment of the appropriateness of institutional prescriptions or the value of social bonds. We link the shame nexus to three broad categories of institutional work
Evaluating the drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use cognitive enhancement drugs: the influence of drug characteristics, social environment, and personal characteristics
Sattler S, Mehlkop G, Graeff P, Sauer C. Evaluating the drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use cognitive enhancement drugs: the influence of drug characteristics, social environment, and personal characteristics. Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy. 2014;9(1): 8.Background
The use of cognitive enhancement (CE) by means of pharmaceutical agents has been the subject of intense debate both among scientists and in the media. This study investigates several drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use prescription drugs non-medically for augmenting brain capacity.
Methods
We conducted a web-based study among 2,877 students from randomly selected disciplines at German universities. Using a factorial survey, respondents expressed their willingness to take various hypothetical CE-drugs; the drugs were described by five experimentally varied characteristics and the social environment by three varied characteristics. Personal characteristics and demographic controls were also measured.
Results
We found that 65.3% of the respondents staunchly refused to use CE-drugs. The results of a multivariate negative binomial regression indicated that respondentsâ willingness to use CE-drugs increased if the potential drugs promised a significant augmentation of mental capacity and a high probability of achieving this augmentation. Willingness decreased when there was a high probability of side effects and a high price. Prevalent CE-drug use among peers increased willingness, whereas a social environment that strongly disapproved of these drugs decreased it. Regarding the respondentsâ characteristics, pronounced academic procrastination, high cognitive test anxiety, low intrinsic motivation, low internalization of social norms against CE-drug use, and past experiences with CE-drugs increased willingness. The potential severity of side effects, social recommendations about using CE-drugs, risk preferences, and competencies had no measured effects upon willingness.
Conclusions
These findings contribute to understanding factors that influence the willingness to use CE-drugs. They support the assumption of instrumental drug use and may contribute to the development of prevention, policy, and educational strategies
Ăpisodes dâinactivitĂ© et revenus criminels dans une trajectoire de dĂ©linquance
LâinstabilitĂ© de lâactivitĂ© criminelle dans le temps est dĂ©jĂ bien documentĂ©e. On connaĂźt toutefois
peu les circonstances qui expliquent ces variations Ă court terme. Une meilleure connaissance de
ces facteurs est souhaitable puisquâil est possible que les transitions et les changements Ă court
terme précÚdent les points tournants des carriÚres criminelles. Les conditions qui rendent compte
dâune interruption temporaire des activitĂ©s peuvent, par exemple, contribuer Ă expliquer un
dĂ©sistement dĂ©finitif. LâĂ©tude se fonde sur les trajectoires de 172 dĂ©linquants impliquĂ©s dans des
crimes Ă but lucratif et analyse les variations mensuelles de leurs revenus criminels ainsi que les
Ă©pisodes dâinactivitĂ© criminelle Ă lâintĂ©rieur dâune pĂ©riode fenĂȘtre de 36 mois. La mĂ©thode des
calendriers dâhistoire de vie combinĂ©e aux modĂšles hiĂ©rarchiques permet dâexaminer
conjointement le rÎle de facteurs statiques (les caractéristiques individuelles des sujets) et
dynamiques (les circonstances de vie). Les rĂ©sultats mettent en Ă©vidence lâimportance des
événements qui marquent le style de vie des délinquants et des paramÚtres qui caractérisent
lâengagement criminel dans la comprĂ©hension des variations dans les trajectoires Ă lâĂ©tude. Ils
soulignent Ă©galement lâimportance de la finalitĂ© derriĂšre les activitĂ©s criminelles pour expliquer
la décision des délinquants de cesser temporaire leurs activités illicites
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