10 research outputs found

    “Cool stuff and hot interfaces”

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    Ursinus College Food Forest at Whittaker Environmental Research Station

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    Students in Patrick Hurley’s ENV-454 Sustainability in the Suburbs capstone course present on their collective and team-based work at the Ursinus Food Forest. In doing so, students in the capstone continue to carry forward and enhance the work of previous capstone courses that have planned and designed as well as planted the nearly two-acre facility. In this video, four separate teams discuss their projects focusing on ecological monitoring, stewardship, harvesting and product development, and site orientation

    Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Intellectual Property Judgments: Analysis and Guidelines for a New International Convention

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    Subjective status and perceived legitimacy across countries

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    The relationships between subjective status and perceived legitimacy are important for understanding the extent to which people with low status are complicit in their oppression. We use novel data from 66 samples and 30 countries (N = 12,788) and find that people with higher status see the social system as more legitimate than those with lower status, but there is variation across people and countries. The association between subjective status and perceived legitimacy was never negative at any levels of eight moderator variables, although the positive association was sometimes reduced. Although not always consistent with hypotheses, group identification, self-esteem, and beliefs in social mobility were all associated with perceived legitimacy among people who have low subjective status. These findings enrich our understanding of the relationship between social status and legitimacy

    Subjective status and perceived legitimacy across countries

    No full text
    The relationships between subjective status and perceived legitimacy are important for understanding the extent to which people with low status are complicit in their oppression. We use novel data from 66 samples and 30 countries (N = 12,788) and find that people with higher status see the social system as more legitimate than those with lower status, but there is variation across people and countries. The association between subjective status and perceived legitimacy was never negative at any levels of eight moderator variables, although the positive association was sometimes reduced. Although not always consistent with hypotheses, group identification, self-esteem, and beliefs in social mobility were all associated with perceived legitimacy among people who have low subjective status. These findings enrich our understanding of the relationship between social status and legitimacy

    What's in a Name? Would a Rose by Any Other Name Really Smell as Sweet?

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