Unit One: Introduction To IB-SACA Inquiry Specific
Unit One: Introduction to IB-SACA Inquiry Specific
Exam (elaborations)
Unit One: Introduction to IB-SACA Inquiry Specific Concepts Test (Questions & Answers) Rated 100% Correct!!
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Course
Unit One: Introduction to IB-SACA Inquiry Specific
Institution
Unit One: Introduction To IB-SACA Inquiry Specific
Marginalization - Relegating specific groups of people to the edge of society, economically,
politically, culturally and socially; limiting their access to productive resources and avenues for the
realization of their productive human potential.
Hegemony - The cultural or political dominance of ...
Unit One: Introduction to IB-SACA
Inquiry Specific Concepts
Marginalization - Relegating specific groups of people to the edge of society, economically,
politically, culturally and socially; limiting their access to productive resources and avenues for the
realization of their productive human potential.
Hegemony - The cultural or political dominance of one social group over others; cultural
processes through which the ruling classes maintain their power.
Acculturation - Cultural change related to contact with another culture.
Agency - This is the capacity of human beings to act in meaningful ways that affect their own lives
and those of others. This may be constrained by class, gender, religion and social and cultural factors.
This term implies that individuals have the capacity to create, change and influence events.
Anthropological research that emphasizes this and focuses on humans acting to promote their interests
and the interests of the groups to which they belong (although what constitutes "interest" may be
subject to debate).
Authority - Power is exercised with the consent of others.
Communication - Language influences social life, forms social identity and group membership,
organizes large-scale cultural beliefs and ideologies, and develops a common cultural representation of
natural and social worlds.
Conflict - Disagreements between individuals, groups, cultures or societies may result from
differences in interests, values or actions. This theory presents a lens, or framework, which can give
anthropologists insight into the social impact of disharmony.
Cultural Relativism - Not making value judgments about cultural differences; understanding a
different culture in its context.
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