Civil society, social movements, and mixed methods
In this lecture, Dr. Dana Fisher overviews the conceptual and methodological approaches used by sociologists to study civil society and social movements. She notes that the research focuses on organizational and institutional forms, as well as forms of action. She then presents an example of studying urban environmental stewardship to exemplify the use of mixed methods in studying civil society, and highlights the use of network analysis and survey methodologies. She also presents an example of studying the climate change movement, and describes the survey and social media analysis used to study the connectivity and communication within social movements. More information on the Immersion Program and other lectures can be found here: http://www.sesync.org/for-you/educato....

Sociological research on environmental concern: Attitudes, beliefs, values

Collective motion, collective decision-making and collective action

LSE Events | Civil Society And The Five Giants

Classic Social Movement Theories, from Contagion to Framing

What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

Most Leaders Don't Even Know the Game They're In | Simon Sinek

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

Ecosystem ecology: Concepts, data, models

Rethinking Urbanization in the 21st Century

Historian Timothy Snyder on ENDING Trump Nightmare FOR GOOD | PoliticsGirl

How online social movements translate to offline results

Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques

Stephen Meyer, John Lennox, and James Tour: Three Scientists on the Origins of Everything

Nervous System Regulation (999 Hz) | 1 hour handpan music | Malte Marten

'Listen Like You Might Be Wrong': Harvard Student Goes Viral For Stunning Speech On Trump Amid Feud

MIT Economist on Finance, AI, and Human Behavior

NCEPCR Webinar: Building the Primary Care Research Workforce: Fellowships in Action

Sarah Paine — The war for India (Lecture & interview)

Time & Mind: Was Einstein Wrong About Time?

