Posts Tagged ‘History of social science’
I gave a one-day workshop on Introduction to Social Network Analysis in July, and it was a great experience -for me and, from what I could see, for participants. I am now about to repeat the experience, and I’m so excited about it! Indeed, at the upcoming Winter School on Analytical Software at the University […]
Filed under: Business networks, Social networks, Social science methodology | 2 Comments
Tags: History of social science, Inter-organisational Networks, Intra-organisational networks, Networks and Markets, Public policy analysis, Quantitative methods, Social science data, social theory, Statistical modeling, Trans-disciplinarity, Web-based social networks
Introduction to SNA short course
The spectacular rise of online social networking services (Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter etc.) in recent years has brought social networks to the fore, and drawn massive attention to the field of study of social network analysis (SNA). Yet social networks have always existed and are in fact a constant of human experience – whether in the […]
Filed under: Business networks, Social networks, Social science methodology | 4 Comments
Tags: History of social science, Inter-organisational Networks, Intra-organisational networks, Networks and Markets, Public policy analysis, Quantitative methods, Social science data, social theory, Statistical modeling, Trans-disciplinarity, Web-based social networks
BSA conference 2011 now finished
The Annual Conference of the British Sociological Association (BSA), on “60 years of sociology”, which I attended this week at the London School of Economics, is now over. A very nice experience -I appreciated the quality of the presentations, both in parallel and plenary sessions, and the organisation which was impeccable. I also felt reassured […]
Filed under: Consumer behaviour, Economic sociology, Social science methodology, Socioeconomic studies of health | 2 Comments
Tags: History of social science, social theory, Sociology
