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Social Relationships
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  1. Bowling Alone
    The Collapse and Revival of American Community

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 2000
    Bowling Alone documents the rise and fall of community activity in the twentieth century in the United States and the social changes this reflects. It offers all the evidence, the confirmatory and the contradictory, to give a complete look at trends of community involvement and how increased social capital can benefit everybody.
  2. City Lives and City Forms
    Critical Research and Canadian Urbanism

    Resource Type: Book
    This book focuses on the interaction between social relations and urban landscape by examining economic and cultural characteristics.
  3. Continuous Excursions
    Politics and Personal Life

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1982
    Colman looks at the idea that 'the personal is political'. He looks at personal life in pre-capitalist societies, the nature of politics and social relations, patriarchy and sexual relations, intimacy and personal life, indviduality and public life.
  4. The Impact of Inequality
    How to Make Sick Societies Better

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 2005
  5. Marxists Internet Archive
    Resource Type: Website
    Large archive of the writings of Marx and Engels and of others in the Marxist tradition. Searchable.
  6. The Politics of Urban Liberation
    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 1978
    A broad-ranging study which covers the political economy of the urban question and the importance of the city in the history of social revolution. Schechter's evaluation of libertarian insurgency highlights the importance of movements from below dealing with housing, transportation and other issues of daily life.
  7. Talking to the Enemy
    Faith, Brotherhood and the (Un)making of Terrorists

    Resource Type: Book
    Published: 2011
    An anthropologiest explores the social ties and values of terrorists, studying militancy from a social science point of view. He uncovers that terrorists become radicalized through their social networks, the author dubs these group dynamics "organized anarchy".

Experts on Social Relationships in the Sources Directory

  1. Marxists Internet Archive


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